Abstract
This paper focuses on how to coordinate a critical set of assignment and routing decisions in a class of multiple-depot transit vehicle scheduling problems. The assignment decision aims to assign a set of transit vehicles from their current locations to trip tasks in a given timetable, where the routing decision needs to route different vehicles to perform the assigned tasks and return to the depot or designated layover locations. When applying the general purpose solvers and task-oriented Lagrangian relaxation framework for real world instances, a thorny issue is that different but indistinguishable vehicles from the same depot or similar locations could commit to the same set of tasks. This inherent solution symmetry property causes extremely difficult computational barriers for effectively eliminating identical solutions, and the lower bound solutions could contain many infeasible vehicle-to-task matches, leading to large optimality gaps. To systematically coordinate the assignment and routing decisions and further dynamically break symmetry during the solution search process, we adopt a variable-splitting approach to introduce task-specific and vehicle-distinguishable Lagrangian multipliers and then propose a sequential assignment process in order to enhance the solution quality for the augmented models with tight formulations. We conduct the numerical experiments to offer the managerial interpretation and examine solution quality of the proposed approach in a wider range of applications.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 70-101 |
Number of pages | 32 |
Journal | Transportation Research Part B: Methodological |
Volume | 107 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jan 2018 |
Keywords
- Coordination
- Lagrangian relaxation
- Network reduction
- Symmetry breaking
- Transit vehicle scheduling
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Civil and Structural Engineering
- Transportation