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Operations Research: Optimization, Heuristics, Simulation, and Forecasting

Operations Research: Optimization, Heuristics, Simulation, and Forecasting. Judy Pastor Continental Airlines. Operations Research. “application of mathematical techniques, models, and tools to a problem within a system to yield the optimal solution” Phases of an OR Project

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Operations Research: Optimization, Heuristics, Simulation, and Forecasting

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  1. Operations Research:Optimization, Heuristics, Simulation, and Forecasting Judy Pastor Continental Airlines AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  2. Operations Research • “application of mathematical techniques, models, and tools to a problem within a system to yield the optimal solution” • Phases of an OR Project • formulate the problem • develop math model to represent the system • solve and derive solution from model • test/validate model and solution • establish controls over the solution • put the solution to work AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  3. Linear Programs - Major Tool of OR • Linear Programs (LPs) are a special type of mathematical model where all relationships between parts of the system being modeled can be represented linearly (a straight line). • Not always realistic, but we know how to solve LPs. • May need to approximate a relationship that is slightly non-linear with a linear one. • When to use: if a problem has too many dimensions and alternative solutions to evaluate all manually, use an LP to evaluate. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  4. Linear Programs - Major Tool of OR • LPs can evaluate thousands, millions, etc. of different alternatives to find the one that best meets the objective of the business problem. • Fleet Assignment Model - assign aircraft to flight legs to minimize cost and maximize revenue • Revenue Management - set bid prices to maximize revenue and/or minimize spill • Crew Scheduling - schedule crew members to minimize number of crew needed and maximize utilization AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  5. Linear Program Formulation • Understand the system and environment to which the problem belongs • Understand the problem and the objective to be achieved • State the model - clear idea of problem and what can and can not be included in the model • Collect Data - get data/parameters/constraints and boundaries of system and interrelationships • Determine decisions - define decision variables - what do we need the model to tell us? • Formulate and solve model AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  6. Example: RM Network LP • Problem - how many passengers of each itinerary and fare class should be accepted on each flight to achieve the maximum revenue for the flight network? • Statement - the model should tell us the above • Data - demand by itinerary/fare class, aircraft capacity, overbooking levels, expected revenue by itinerary/fare class • Decisions - how many passengers of each itinerary/fare class to accept on each flight leg AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  7. Example: RM Network LPData Collection • Two Flights: SFO-IAH, IAH-AUS • Two fare classes: Y-high fare, Q-low fare • Three itineraries: SFOIAH, IAHAUS, SFOAUS • Six fares: Y Q • SFOIAH 400 300 • IAHAUS 250 100 • SFOAUS 450 350 • Flight capacity: SFO-IAH 124, IAH-AUS 94 • No overbooking AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  8. Example: RM Network LPData Collection (continued) • Demand Y Q • SFOIAH 30 90 • IAHAUS 50 30 • SFOAUS 20 50 AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  9. Example: RM Network LPFormulate Model • Definition of Data: • F set of flights = {SFOIAH, IAHAUS} • f index of F (1,2) • CAPf capacity of flightf = {124, 94 } • I set of itineraries {SFOIAH, IAHAUS, SFOAUS} • i index of I (1,2,3) • IFf set of itineraries over flight f • IF1={SFOIAH,SFOAUS} IF2={IAHAUS,SFOAUS} • C set of classes {Y, Q} • c index of C (1,2) • DMDi,c demand for itinerary i and class c • FAREi,c fare for itinerary i and class c AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  10. Example: RM Network LP Formulate Model • Now that we have defined all the data that we know about the model, we now must define what we want the model to tell us. • Problem - how many passengers of each itinerary and fare class should be accepted on each flight to achieve the maximum revenue for the flight network? • Define decision variables: • Xi,c # pax accepted for itinerary i and class c • There are 3 itineraries and 2 classes so there are a total of 6 decision variables. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  11. Example: RM Network LP Formulate Model • Many sets of values (collectively called solutions) for the six Xi,c variables exist which could satisfy the constraints (formulation coming) of aircraft capacity and maximum demand. These are “feasible” solutions. • Which solution do we want? • Problem - how many passengers of each itinerary and fare class should be accepted on each flight to achieve the maximum revenue for the flight network? • The feasible solution for this is “optimal”. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  12. Example: RM Network LP Objective Function AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  13. Example: RM Network LP Objective Function & Constraints • The Objective Function is an expression that defines the optimal solution, out of the many feasible solutions. We can either • MAXimize - usually used with revenue or profit or • MINimize - usually used with costs • Feasible solutions must satisfy the constraints of the problem. LPs are used to allocate scarce resources in the best possible manner. Constraints define the scarcity. • The scarcity in this problem involves a fixed number of seats and scarce high paying customers. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  14. Example: RM Network LP Constraints AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  15. Example: RM Network LP Constraints • Rules for Constraints • must be a linear expression • decision variables can be summed together but not multiplied or divided by each other • have relational operators of =, <=, or >= • must be continuous • Constraints define the “feasible region” - all points within the feasible region satisfy the constraints. • The feasible region is convex. • The optimal solution lies at an extreme point of the feasible region. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  16. Example: RM Network LPCplex Input File MAX 400 X_SFOIAH_Y + 300 X_SFOIAH_Q + 250 X_IAHAUS_Y + 100 X_IAHAUS_Q + 450 X_SFOAUS_Y + 320 X_SFOAUS_Q ST CAPY_SFOIAH: X_SFOIAH_Y + X_SFOIAH_Q + X_SFOAUS_Y + X_SFOAUS_Q <= 124 CAPY_IAHAUS: X_SFOAUS_Y + X_SFOAUS_Q + X_IAHAUS_Y + X_IAHAUS_Q <=94 DMD_SFOIAH_Y: X_SFOIAH_Y <= 30 DMD_SFOIAH_Q: X_SFOIAH_Q <= 90 DMD_IAHAUS_Y: X_IAHAUS_Y <= 50 DMD_IAHAUS_Q: X_IAHAUS_Q <= 30 DMD_SFOAUS_Y: X_SFOAUS_Y <= 20 DMD_SFOAUS_Q: X_SFOAUS_Q <= 50 END AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  17. Example: RM Network LPSolution - Constraints SECTION 1 - ROWS NUMBER ......ROW....... AT ...ACTIVITY... SLACK ACTIVITY ..LOWER LIMIT. ..UPPER LIMIT. .DUAL ACTIVITY 1 obj BS 58100 -58100 NONE NONE 1 2 CAPY_SFOIAH UL 124 0 NONE 124 -300 3 CAPY_IAHAUS UL 94 0 NONE 94 -100 4 DMD_SFOIAH_Y UL 30 0 NONE 30 -100 5 DMD_SFOIAH_Q BS 74 16 NONE 90 0 6 DMD_IAHAUS_Y UL 50 0 NONE 50 -150 7 DMD_IAHAUS_Q BS 24 6 NONE 30 0 8 DMD_SFOAUS_Y UL 20 0 NONE 20 -50 9 DMD_SFOAUS_Q BS 0 50 NONE 50 0 obj is the objective function value - total revenue from the small network of flights CAPY_SFOIAH and CAPY_IAHAUS are the capacity constraints. Both are at UL - upper limit with activities of 124 and 94, respectively (i.e. both flight legs are full). Dual Activity on each capacity constraint is also known as the Shadow Price of the flight. The SP of SFOIAH is 300 and the SP of IAHAUS is 100. In RM terms, this means that the value of one more seat on SFOIAH is 300 and the value of one more seat on IAHAUS is 100. Alternately, 300 and 100 also define the lowest fare that should be accepted on each leg. DMD_{SFOIAH,IAHAUS}_{Y,Q} are the demand constraints. SFOIAH_Y, IAHAUS_Y, and SFOAUS_Y are at upper level (i.e. accept all Y passengers). Reject some/all of Q. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  18. Example: RM Network LPSolution - Decision Variables SECTION 2 - COLUMNS NUMBER .....COLUMN..... AT ...ACTIVITY... ..INPUT COST.. ..LOWER LIMIT. ..UPPER LIMIT. .REDUCED COST. 10 X_SFOIAH_Y BS 30 400 0 NONE 0 11 X_SFOIAH_Q BS 74 300 0 NONE 0 12 X_IAHAUS_Y BS 50 250 0 NONE 0 13 X_IAHAUS_Q BS 24 100 0 NONE 0 14 X_SFOAUS_Y BS 20 450 0 NONE 0 15 X_SFOAUS_Q LL 0 320 0 NONE -80 This section of the solution report shows the values for the decision variables at the optimal solution. The LP tells us to accept 30 SFOIAH Y, 74 SFOIAH Q (reject 16), accept 50 IAHAUS Y, accept 24 IAHAUS Q (reject 6), accept 20 SFOAUS Y, and accept no SFOAUS Q. Note that the LP cut off all SFOAUS Q booking requests because their fare of 320 is less than the sum of the shadow prices of the two flights (300+100 = 400 > 320). AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  19. Example: RM Network LPSolving LPs • A problem that sounds small, like our example, can balloon out into many decision variables and constraints. • Computer software is available to solve linear programs. • Cost of programs depends on size of problems to be solved. • Excel has an Add-in to solve small LPs. • CPLEX is state of the art, but more expensive. • LPs with 100,000s row and columns can be solved. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  20. Example: RM Network LPSolving LPs • The first method of solving LPs was invented during WWII by George Dantzig. The algorithm is called SIMPLEX. It is based on convexity theory and that the optimal solution will occur at an extreme point of the solution space • Newer state of the art algorithms are based on steepest descent gradient methods and are called “interior point” methods • Interior point methods can be extremely fast (much faster than SIMPLEX) for certain structures of problems AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  21. Degeneracy • When an LP has more than one unique way to reach an optimal objective function value, we say that the problem is “degenerate” • LP solvers can detect degeneracy but only report one solution • It would be nice to see all possible solutions • Different solvers can “land” on different solutions of a degenerate problem, depending on solution strategy • The RM Network problem is usually degenerate AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  22. Other Types of Linear Optimizations • MIP (Mixed Integer Programming) • is similar to LP but at least one decision variable is required to be a integer value • violates the LP rule that decision variables be continuous • is solved by “branch and bound” - solving a series of LPs that fix the integer decision variables to various integer values and comparing the resulting objective function values • is done in a smart way to avoid enumerating all possibilities • is useful, since you can not have .3 of an aircraft AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  23. Other Types of Linear Optimization • Network problem • is a special form of LP which turns out to be “naturally integer” • can be solved faster than an LP, using a special network optimization algorithm • is very restrictive on types of constraints that can be present in the problem • Shortest Path • finds the shortest path from the source (start) to sink (end) nodes, along connecting arcs, each having a cost associated with them • is used in many applications AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  24. Other Optimization Models • Quadratic Program • has a quadratic objective function with linear constraints • can be applied to revenue management, because it allows fare to rise with demand within a problem • price(OD) = 50 + [5*numpax(OD)] • max revenue = price * numpax AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  25. Other Optimization Models • Non-linear Program (NLP) • can have either non-linear objective function or non-linear constraints or both • feasible region is generally not convex • much more difficult to solve • but it is worth our time to learn to solve them since world is actually non-linear most of the time • some non-linear programs can be solved with LPs or MIPs using piecewise linear functions AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  26. Deterministic versus Stochastic • Two broad categories of optimization models exist • deterministic • parameters/data known with certainty • stochastic • parameters/data know with uncertainty • Deterministic models are easier to solve. Our RM LP is deterministic (we pretend we know the demand with certainty). • Stochastic model are difficult to solve. In reality, we know a distribution about our demand. We get around this in real life by re-optimizing. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  27. Deterministic versus Stochastic • Deterministic optimization ignores risk of being wrong about parameter/data estimates. • No commercial software packages are currently available to do generalized, stochastic optimization. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  28. Heuristics • Definition - educated guess • When you use a heuristic to solve a problem, you have a gut feeling that it is a pretty good solution, but can not prove it mathematically • You can not prove that there is not a better solution out there • To qualify as an “optimal” solution, there must be a mathematical proof to say that no better solution exists AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  29. Types of Heuristics • “Greedy Algorithms” - also called “myopic” - nearsighted solutions. • Example: in our RM Network LP, the greedy solution would be to take the highest fare passengers possible on each leg, without looking at the consequences of doing so on the connecting leg. So the greedy solution is to take the SFOAUS Q passengers at a fare of $320. But the optimal solution looks at displacement and says do not take any SFOAUS Q passengers. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  30. Heuristics • Combinatorial problems can grow exponentially when the number of decisions needed to be made grows linearly. Heuristics can be used in these cases to get a good solution in a reasonable amount of time. • TSP - Travelling Salesman Problem is a good example of this. • EMSR is a heuristic. It is provably optimal for two fare classes, but not more. However, it gives a good answer in a finite amount of time and takes probability into account. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  31. Simulation • When a problem is too complicated to be put into an LP or a solvable non-linear optimization, one way to study the problem is to simulate it under different conditions. • PODS (Passenger O & D Simulation) is one. • Simulation can tell us something about a set of parameters (i.e. total revenue, load factor), but does not point us in the direction of an improvement. AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  32. Forecasting • Types of forecasting techniques used in RM: • pick-up • booking regression • exponential smoothing • Pick-up - adds average future bookings from historical observations to bookings on hand. • Booking Regression - computes best fit for history of bookings on hand (independent) to final booked (dependent) • final booked = a + b*(bookings on hand) AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

  33. Forecasting • Exponential Smoothing - similar to pick-up except the average is weighted. The most recent historical observations are weighted most heavily, decreasing for earlier observations. • recursive relationship • Avg Pick Up = a * (pick upt-1) + (1-a)2* (pick upt-2) + ... • boils down to • Avg Pick Up = a * (pick upt-1) + (1-a) * (last fcst pick up) • Problem is how to estimate a. 0<=a<=1 • How much weight should be on most recent observation? AGIFORS Res and YM Study Group Conference, NYC, 2000

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