Focused Simulated Annealing Search: An Application to Job-Shop Scheduling - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Focused Simulated Annealing Search: An Application to Job-Shop Scheduling

Norman Sadeh-Koniecpol and Yoichiro Nakakuki
Tech. Report, CMU-RI-TR-94-29, Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, September, 1994

Abstract

This paper presents a simulated annealing search procedure developed to solve job shop scheduling problems simultaneously subject to tardiness and inventory costs. The procedure is shown to significantly increase schedule quality compared to multiple combinations of dispatch rules and release policies, though at the expense of intense computational efforts. A meta-heuristic procedure is developed that aims at increasing the efficiency of simulated annealing by dynamically inflating the costs associated with major inefficiencies in the current solution. Three different variations of this procedure are considered. One of these variations is shown to yield significant reductions in computation time, especially on problems where search is more likely to get trapped in local minima. We analyze why this variation of the meta-heuristic is more effective than the others.

BibTeX

@techreport{Sadeh-Koniecpol-1994-13762,
author = {Norman Sadeh-Koniecpol and Yoichiro Nakakuki},
title = {Focused Simulated Annealing Search: An Application to Job-Shop Scheduling},
year = {1994},
month = {September},
institute = {Carnegie Mellon University},
address = {Pittsburgh, PA},
number = {CMU-RI-TR-94-29},
}