Quadratic assignment problem: Difference between revisions

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=== Hospital Layout ===
=== Hospital Layout ===
Building a new hospitals was a common event in  1977 when Alealid N Elshafei wrote his paper on "Hospital Layouts as a Quadratic Assignment Problem". With high initial cost to construct the hospital and to staff it, it is important to ensure that it is operating as efficiently as possible. Elshafei's paper was commissioned to create a optimization formula to locate clinics within a building in such a way that minimizes the total distance that a patient travels within the hospital throughout the year. When doing a study of a major hospital in Cario he determined that the Out-patient ward was acting as a bottle neck in the hospital and focused his efforts on optimizing the 17 departments there.
Building a new hospitals was a common event in  1977 when Alealid N Elshafei wrote his paper on "Hospital Layouts as a Quadratic Assignment Problem". With high initial cost to construct the hospital and to staff it, it is important to ensure that it is operating as efficiently as possible. Elshafei's paper was commissioned to create a optimization formula to locate clinics within a building in such a way that minimizes the total distance that a patient travels within the hospital throughout the year. When doing a study of a major hospital in Cairo he determined that the Out-patient ward was acting as a bottle neck in the hospital and focused his efforts on optimizing the 17 departments there.




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It can take a large amount of computational power to calculate the solution to a QAP problem, necessitating
 
It can take a large amount of computational power to calculate the solution to a QAP problem, necessitating the use of a heuristic solution rather than using an optimizing algorithm. This approach is composed of two parts(Parts A and Part B). Part A that develops the initial layout of the hospital, this is done by following two strategies. Strategy 1 where we use a rank <math>L_{i} </math> that designates the number of interactions facility <math>i </math> has with with the other facilities. As well as ranking them in terms of <math>R_{j} </math>, which designates the sum of distances from j to all other locations. then we go through the list and find the facility with the greatest <math>L_{i} </math> and the least <math>R_{j} </math>. Strategy 2 says that any step in the process we next place an unassigned facility that has the largest number of interactions with the most recently placed facility. Part B covers improving the initial solution developed in Part A, here at any step in the process we test weather the assignment is best of all of the facilities that are involved and make swaps where necessary until there are no more swaps to be made.
 
For the Cairo hospital with 17 clinics, and one receiving and recording room bringing us to a total of 18 facilities. By running the above optimization Elshafei was able to get the total distance per year down to 11,281,887 from a distance of 13,973,298 biased on the original hospital layout.


== Conclusion ==
== Conclusion ==

Revision as of 19:11, 21 November 2020

Author: Thomas Kueny, Eric Miller, Natasha Rice, Joseph Szczerba, David Wittmann (SysEn 5800 Fall 2020)

Introduction

Theory, Methodology, and/or Algorithmic Discussions

Joe Szczerba and Tom Kueny to provide.

Numerical Example

Consider the QAP of placing 3 facilities in 3 locations. Let the distance and flow matrices be defined respectively as , .

For each pair , represents the distance between locations and . represents the required flow (of supplies, products, etc.) between facilities and . The optimal solution will be the arrangement of the 3 facilities in the 3 locations so that the total flow over distance is minimized. Intuitively, the product of distance and flow represents cost, and the objective is to minimize this cost. Ideally, two facilities with lots of flow (more product or supplies) between the two should be placed closer together than two facilities that rarely interact (low flow).

There are permutations of the 3 facilities in the 3 locations. The set of these permutations is typically denoted . As an example, the permutation represents facility 3 being placed at location 1, facility 1 at location 2 and facility 2 at location 3. Each permutation can be assigned a permutation matrix. The permutation matrix of can be written as . The operation permutes the distance matrix values so that represents the distance between facilities and if the facilities are arranged according to the permutation . Then the cost function between facilities and , after being permuted to their location, is . To find the total cost, sum over each and for the facilities arranged according to .

Defining the inner product of two matrices as , the objective function can be written as . (Since this matrix is symmetric, and the inner product double counts each value, the optimal cost value will actually requiring dividing by 2).

Let be the set of permutation matrices for . The problem can be stated as follows:

. The table lists the resulting cost function to place the facilities according to each permutation . Note that is the identity mapping where the number of the facility is the location number.

Cost for Each Permutation in
Permutation Cost
( ) 91.4
99.8
98.4
86.5
103.3
90

Based on these results, is the arrangement of facilities that minimizes the cost function with a value of 86.5. Facility 1 should be placed at location 3, Facility 2 remains at location 2 and Facility 3 is placed at location 1.

Applications

Natasha Rice and David Wittmann to provide.

Inter-plant Transportation Problem

The quadratic assignment problem was first introduced by Koopmans and Beckmann to address how economic decisions could be made to optimize the transportation costs of goods between both manufacturing plants and locations. Factoring in the location of the each of the manufacturing plants as well as the volume of goods between locations to maximize revenue is what distinguishes this from other linear programming assignment problems like the Knapsack Problem.

The Backboard Wiring Problem

As the quadratic assignment problem is focused on minimizing the cost of traveling from one location to another, it is an ideal approach determining placement of components in many modern electronics. Leon Steinberg proposed a QAP solution optimize the layout of elements on a blackboard by minimizing the total amount of wiring required.

When defining the problem Steinberg states that we have a set of n elements

as well as a set of r points

where

In his paper he derives the below formula:


represents the number of wires connecting components and

is the length of wire needed to connect tow components if one is placed at and the other is placed at . If has coordinates then can be calculated by

represents a particular placement of a component.

In his paper Steinberg a backboard with a 9 by 4 array, allowing for 36 potential positions for the 34 components that needed to be placed on the backboard. For the calculation he selected a random initial placement of s1 and chose a random family of 25 unconnected sets.

The initial placement of components is shown below:

The initial placement of components in the backboard from Steinberg's

After the initial placement of elements it took an additional 35 iterations to get us to our final optimized backboard layout. Leading to a total of 59 iterations and a final wire length of 4,969.440.

Final component position in Steinberg's Backboard optimization problem

Hospital Layout

Building a new hospitals was a common event in 1977 when Alealid N Elshafei wrote his paper on "Hospital Layouts as a Quadratic Assignment Problem". With high initial cost to construct the hospital and to staff it, it is important to ensure that it is operating as efficiently as possible. Elshafei's paper was commissioned to create a optimization formula to locate clinics within a building in such a way that minimizes the total distance that a patient travels within the hospital throughout the year. When doing a study of a major hospital in Cairo he determined that the Out-patient ward was acting as a bottle neck in the hospital and focused his efforts on optimizing the 17 departments there.


Elshafei identified the following QAP to determine where clinics should be placed:

Such that

is the yearly flow between facilities i and k

is the distance between the possible facility locations j and q

is the initial set of facilities

is the initial set of all locations


It can take a large amount of computational power to calculate the solution to a QAP problem, necessitating the use of a heuristic solution rather than using an optimizing algorithm. This approach is composed of two parts(Parts A and Part B). Part A that develops the initial layout of the hospital, this is done by following two strategies. Strategy 1 where we use a rank that designates the number of interactions facility has with with the other facilities. As well as ranking them in terms of , which designates the sum of distances from j to all other locations. then we go through the list and find the facility with the greatest and the least . Strategy 2 says that any step in the process we next place an unassigned facility that has the largest number of interactions with the most recently placed facility. Part B covers improving the initial solution developed in Part A, here at any step in the process we test weather the assignment is best of all of the facilities that are involved and make swaps where necessary until there are no more swaps to be made.

For the Cairo hospital with 17 clinics, and one receiving and recording room bringing us to a total of 18 facilities. By running the above optimization Elshafei was able to get the total distance per year down to 11,281,887 from a distance of 13,973,298 biased on the original hospital layout.

Conclusion

References

  1. Alwalid N. Elshafei. Hospital Layout as a Quadratic Assignment Problem. Operational Research Quarterly (1970-1977). 1977;28(1):167. doi:10.2307/3008789
  2. Leon Steinberg. The Backboard Wiring Problem: A Placement Algorithm. SIAM Review. 1961;3(1):37.
  3. https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.217.1914&rep=rep1&type=pdf
  4. Koopmans, T., & Beckmann, M. (1957). Assignment Problems and the Location of Economic Activities. Econometrica, 25(1), 53-76. doi:10.2307/1907742