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On the kidney exchange problem: cardinality constrained cycle and chain problems on directed graphs: a survey of integer programming approaches

journal contribution
posted on 2017-01-01, 00:00 authored by Vicky MakVicky Mak
The Kidney Exchange Problem (KEP) is a combinatorial optimization problem and has attracted the attention from the community of integer programming/combinatorial optimisation in the past few years. Defined on a directed graph, the KEP has two variations: one concerns cycles only, and the other, cycles as well as chains on the same graph. We call the former a Cardinality Constrained Multi-cycle Problem (CCMcP) and the latter a Cardinality Constrained Cycles and Chains Problem (CCCCP). The cardinality for cycles is restricted in both CCMcP and CCCCP. As for chains, some studies in the literature considered cardinality restrictions, whereas others did not. The CCMcP can be viewed as an Asymmetric Travelling Salesman Problem that does allow subtours, however these subtours are constrained by cardinality, and that it is not necessary to visit all vertices. In existing literature of the KEP, the cardinality constraint for cycles is usually considered to be small (to the best of our knowledge, no more than six). In a CCCCP, each vertex on the directed graph can be included in at most one cycle or chain, but not both. The CCMcP and the CCCCP are interesting and challenging combinatorial optimization problems in their own rights, particularly due to their similarities to some travelling salesman- and vehicle routing-family of problems. In this paper, our main focus is to review the existing mathematical programming models and solution methods in the literature, analyse the performance of these models, and identify future research directions. Further, we propose a polynomial-sized and an exponential-sized mixed-integer linear programming model, discuss a number of stronger constraints for cardinality-infeasible-cycle elimination for the latter, and present some preliminary numerical results.

History

Journal

Journal of combinatorial optimization

Volume

33

Issue

1

Pagination

351 - 59

Publisher

Springer

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

1382-6905

eISSN

1573-2886

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Springer