The Design of Approximation Algorithms

The Design of Approximation Algorithms

ISBN-10:
0521195276
ISBN-13:
9780521195270
Pub. Date:
04/26/2011
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
ISBN-10:
0521195276
ISBN-13:
9780521195270
Pub. Date:
04/26/2011
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
The Design of Approximation Algorithms

The Design of Approximation Algorithms

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Overview

Discrete optimization problems are everywhere, from traditional operations research planning problems, such as scheduling, facility location, and network design; to computer science problems in databases; to advertising issues in viral marketing. Yet most such problems are NP-hard. Thus unless P = NP, there are no efficient algorithms to find optimal solutions to such problems. This book shows how to design approximation algorithms: efficient algorithms that find provably near-optimal solutions. The book is organized around central algorithmic techniques for designing approximation algorithms, including greedy and local search algorithms, dynamic programming, linear and semidefinite programming, and randomization. Each chapter in the first part of the book is devoted to a single algorithmic technique, which is then applied to several different problems. The second part revisits the techniques but offers more sophisticated treatments of them. The book also covers methods for proving that optimization problems are hard to approximate. Designed as a textbook for graduate-level algorithms courses, the book will also serve as a reference for researchers interested in the heuristic solution of discrete optimization problems.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780521195270
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 04/26/2011
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 518
Product dimensions: 7.10(w) x 10.10(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

David P. Williamson is a Professor at Cornell University with a joint appointment in the School of Operations Research and Information Engineering and in the Department of Information Science. Prior to joining Cornell, he was a Research Staff Member at the IBM T. J. Watson Research Center and a Senior Manager at the IBM Almaden Research Center. He has won several awards for his work on approximation algorithms, including the 2000 Fulkerson Prize, sponsored by the American Mathematical Society and the Mathematical Programming Society. He has served on several editorial boards, including ACM Transactions on Algorithms, Mathematics of Operations Research, the SIAM Journal on Computing and the SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics.

David Shmoys has faculty appointments in both the School of Operations Research and Information Engineering and the Department of Computer Science, and he is currently Associate Director of the Institute for Computational Sustainability at Cornell University. He is a Fellow of the ACM, was an NSF Presidential Young Investigator, and has served on numerous editorial boards, including Mathematics of Operations Research (for which he is currently an associate editor), Operations Research, the ORSA Journal on Computing, Mathematical Programming and both the SIAM Journal on Computing and the SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics; he also served as editor-in-chief for the latter.

Table of Contents

Part I. An Introduction to the Techniques: 1. An introduction to approximation algorithms; 2. Greedy algorithms and local search; 3. Rounding data and dynamic programming; 4. Deterministic rounding of linear programs; 5. Random sampling and randomized rounding of linear programs; 6. Randomized rounding of semidefinite programs; 7. The primal-dual method; 8. Cuts and metrics; Part II. Further Uses of the Techniques: 9. Further uses of greedy and local search algorithms; 10. Further uses of rounding data and dynamic programming; 11. Further uses of deterministic rounding of linear programs; 12. Further uses of random sampling and randomized rounding of linear programs; 13. Further uses of randomized rounding of semidefinite programs; 14. Further uses of the primal-dual method; 15. Further uses of cuts and metrics; 16. Techniques in proving the hardness of approximation; 17. Open problems; Appendix A. Linear programming; Appendix B. NP-completeness.
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