Home
Scholarly Works
The complexity of geometric scaling
Preprint

The complexity of geometric scaling

Abstract

Geometric scaling, introduced by Schulz and Weismantel in 2002, solves the integer optimization problem $\max \{c\mathord{\cdot}x: x \in P \cap \mathbb Z^n\}$ by means of primal augmentations, where $P \subset \mathbb R^n$ is a polytope. We restrict ourselves to the important case when $P$ is a $0/1$-polytope. Schulz and Weismantel showed that no more than $O(n \log n \|c\|_\infty)$ calls to an augmentation oracle are required. This upper bound can be improved to $O(n \log \|c\|_\infty)$ using the early-stopping policy proposed in 2018 by Le Bodic, Pavelka, Pfetsch, and Pokutta. Considering both the maximum ratio augmentation variant of the method as well as its approximate version, we show that these upper bounds are essentially tight by maximizing over a $n$-dimensional simplex with vectors $c$ such that $\|c\|_\infty$ is either $n$ or $2^n$.

Authors

Deza A; Pokutta S; Pournin L

Publication date

May 9, 2022

DOI

10.48550/arxiv.2205.04063

Preprint server

arXiv
View published work (Non-McMaster Users)

Contact the Experts team