Elsevier

Discrete Applied Mathematics

Volume 154, Issue 15, 1 October 2006, Pages 2097-2116
Discrete Applied Mathematics

A branch-and-bound algorithm to solve the linear ordering problem for weighted tournaments

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Abstract

The linear ordering problem consists in finding a linear order at minimum remoteness from a weighted tournament T, the remoteness being the sum of the weights of the arcs that we must reverse in T to transform it into a linear order. This problem, also known as the search of a median order, or of a maximum acyclic subdigraph, or of a maximum consistent set, or of a minimum feedback arc set, is NP-hard; when all the weights of T are equal to 1, the linear ordering problem is the same as Slater's problem. In this paper, we describe the principles and the results of an exact method designed to solve the linear ordering problem for any weighted tournament. This method, of which the corresponding software is freely available at the URL address http://www.enst.fr/~charon/tournament/median.html, is based upon a branch-and-bound search with a Lagrangean relaxation as the evaluation function and a noising method for computing the initial bound. Other components are designed to reduce the BB-search-tree.

Keywords

Linear ordering problem
Slater's problem
Kemeny's problem
Median order
Tournaments
Branch and bound
Lagrangean relaxation
Noising methods

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