Publication: A Quantum-inspired bilevel optimization algorithm for the first responder network design problem
Program
KU-Authors
Salman, Fatma Sibel
Pashapour, Amirreza
Yıldız, Barış
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Karahalios, Anthony
Tayur, Sridhar
Tenneti, Ananth
Advisor
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Abstract
In the aftermath of a sudden catastrophe, first responders (FRs) strive to reach and rescue immobile victims. Simultaneously, civilians use the same roads to evacuate, access medical facilities and shelters, or reunite with their relatives via private vehicles. The escalated traffic congestion can significantly hinder critical FR operations. A proposal from the Tu <spacing diaeresis>rkiye Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure is to allocate a lane on specific road segments exclusively for FR use, mark them clearly, and precommunicate them publicly. For a successful implementation of this proposal, an FR path should exist from designated entry points to each FR demand point in the network. The reserved FR lanes along these paths will be inaccessible to evacuees, potentially increasing evacuation times. Hence, in this study, we aim to determine a subset of links along which an FR lane should be reserved and analyze the resulting evacuation flow under evacuees' selfish routing behavior. We introduce this problem as the first responder network design problem (FRNDP) and formulate it as a mixed-integer nonlinear program. To efficiently solve FRNDP, we introduce a novel bilevel nested heuristic, the Graver augmented multiseed algorithm (GAMA) within GAMA, called GAGA. We test GAGA on synthetic graph instances of various sizes as well as scenarios related to a potential Istanbul earthquake. Our comparisons with a state-of-the-art exact algorithm for network design problems demonstrate that GAGA offers a promising alternative approach and highlights the need for further exploration of quantum-inspired computing to tackle complex realworld problems.
Source:
INFORMS JOURNAL ON COMPUTING
Publisher:
INFORMS
Keywords:
Subject
Computer science