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On August 1997 a conference titled "From Local to Global Optimiza-
tion" was held at Storgarden in Rimfor.sa near the Linkoping
Institute of Technology, Sweden. The conference gave us the
opportunity to cel- ebrate Hoang Thy's achievements in Optimization
during his 70 years of life. This book consists of a collection of
research papers based on results presented during the conference
and are dedicated to Professor Hoang Thy on the occasion of his
70th birthday. The papers cover a wide range of recent results in
Mathematical Pro- gramming. The work of Hoang Thy, in particular in
Global Optimiza- tion, has provided directions for new algorithmic
developments in the field. We are indebted to the Kluwer Academic
Publishers for inviting us to publish this volume, and the Center
for Industrial Information Transfer (CENIIT) for financial support.
We wish to thank the referees for their help and the authors for
their papers. We also wish to join all contributors of this book in
expressing birthday wishes and gratitude to Hoang Thy for his
inspiration, support, and friendship to all of us. Athanasios
Migdalas, Panos M. Pardalos, and Peter Varbrand November 1998 xv
Hoang Tuy: An Appreciation Its a pleasure for me as colleague and
friend to take this opportunity to celebrate Hoang 'I\lY'S numerous
contributions to the field of mathemat- ical programming.
During the last three decades, breakthroughs in computer technology
have made a tremendous impact on optimization. In particular,
parallel computing has made it possible to solve larger and
computationally more difficult problems. The book covers recent
developments in novel programming and algorithmic aspects of
parallel computing as well as technical advances in parallel
optimization. Each contribution is essentially expository in
nature, but of scholarly treatment. In addition, each chapter
includes a collection of carefully selected problems. The first two
chapters discuss theoretical models for parallel algorithm design
and their complexity. The next chapter gives the perspective of the
programmer practicing parallel algorithm development on real world
platforms. Solving systems of linear equations efficiently is of
great importance not only because they arise in many scientific and
engineering applications but also because algorithms for solving
many optimization problems need to call system solvers and
subroutines (chapters four and five). Chapters six through thirteen
are dedicated to optimization problems and methods. They include
parallel algorithms for network problems, parallel branch and bound
techniques, parallel heuristics for discrete and continuous
problems, decomposition methods, parallel algorithms for
variational inequality problems, parallel algorithms for stochastic
programming, and neural networks. Audience: Parallel Computing in
Optimization is addressed not only to researchers of mathematical
programming, but to all scientists in various disciplines who use
optimization methods in parallel and multiprocessing environments
to model and solve problems.
This comprehensive work examines important recent developments and
modern applications in the fields of optimization, control, game
theory and equilibrium programming. In particular, the concepts of
equilibrium and optimality are of immense practical importance
affecting decision-making problems regarding policy and strategies,
and in understanding and predicting systems in different
application domains, ranging from economics and engineering to
military applications. The book consists of 29 survey chapters
written by distinguished researchers in the above areas.
During the last three decades, breakthroughs in computer technology
have made a tremendous impact on optimization. In particular,
parallel computing has made it possible to solve larger and
computationally more difficult prob lems. This volume contains
mainly lecture notes from a Nordic Summer School held at the
Linkoping Institute of Technology, Sweden in August 1995. In order
to make the book more complete, a few authors were invited to
contribute chapters that were not part of the course on this first
occasion. The purpose of this Nordic course in advanced studies was
three-fold. One goal was to introduce the students to the new
achievements in a new and very active field, bring them close to
world leading researchers, and strengthen their competence in an
area with internationally explosive rate of growth. A second goal
was to strengthen the bonds between students from different Nordic
countries, and to encourage collaboration and joint research
ventures over the borders. In this respect, the course built
further on the achievements of the "Nordic Network in Mathematical
Programming," which has been running during the last three years
with the support ofthe Nordic Council for Advanced Studies (NorFA).
The final goal was to produce literature on the particular subject,
which would be available to both the participating students and to
the students of the "next generation" ."
Researchers working with nonlinear programming often claim "the
word is non linear" indicating that real applications require
nonlinear modeling. The same is true for other areas such as
multi-objective programming (there are always several goals in a
real application), stochastic programming (all data is uncer tain
and therefore stochastic models should be used), and so forth. In
this spirit we claim: The word is multilevel. In many decision
processes there is a hierarchy of decision makers, and decisions
are made at different levels in this hierarchy. One way to handle
such hierar chies is to focus on one level and include other
levels' behaviors as assumptions. Multilevel programming is the
research area that focuses on the whole hierar chy structure. In
terms of modeling, the constraint domain associated with a
multilevel programming problem is implicitly determined by a series
of opti mization problems which must be solved in a predetermined
sequence. If only two levels are considered, we have one leader
(associated with the upper level) and one follower (associated with
the lower level)."
On August 1997 a conference titled "From Local to Global Optimiza-
tion" was held at Storgarden in Rimfor.sa near the Linkoping
Institute of Technology, Sweden. The conference gave us the
opportunity to cel- ebrate Hoang Thy's achievements in Optimization
during his 70 years of life. This book consists of a collection of
research papers based on results presented during the conference
and are dedicated to Professor Hoang Thy on the occasion of his
70th birthday. The papers cover a wide range of recent results in
Mathematical Pro- gramming. The work of Hoang Thy, in particular in
Global Optimiza- tion, has provided directions for new algorithmic
developments in the field. We are indebted to the Kluwer Academic
Publishers for inviting us to publish this volume, and the Center
for Industrial Information Transfer (CENIIT) for financial support.
We wish to thank the referees for their help and the authors for
their papers. We also wish to join all contributors of this book in
expressing birthday wishes and gratitude to Hoang Thy for his
inspiration, support, and friendship to all of us. Athanasios
Migdalas, Panos M. Pardalos, and Peter Varbrand November 1998 xv
Hoang Tuy: An Appreciation Its a pleasure for me as colleague and
friend to take this opportunity to celebrate Hoang 'I\lY'S numerous
contributions to the field of mathemat- ical programming.
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