Researchers Sharpen a 70-Year-Old Math Tool That Solves Business Optimization Problems
Scientists have upgraded the simplex method, a foundational algorithm used by companies to optimize everything from supply chains to production schedules. The enhancement cuts through computational bottlenecks that plague real-world problems, potentially saving businesses time and money on complex decision-making.
Originaltitel: A global pricing extension of the simplex method
<p>We introduce the use of a global, nonlinear price function in linear programming and the simplex method. The usual, linear price function of this method captures the objective's behavior over the cone of directions defined by the nonbasic columns, whereas the global price function adds information about the topology of the whole feasible set. This is achieved by using an exterior penalty function. Further, degeneracy is effectively handled through explicit degeneracy-breaking constraints. The use of the global price function leads to a pricing problem that yields an improving, non-edge feasible direction, which is converted to an auxiliary variable to be used in the simplex method. Preliminary computational results with nondegenerate and highly degenerate linear programs show that the introduction of a global price function in the simplex method, and degeneracy-breaking constraints if needed, may significantly enhance its performance.</p>