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The quadratic assignment problem (QAP) was introduced in 1957 by
Koopmans and Beckmann to model a plant location problem. Since then
the QAP has been object of numerous investigations by
mathematicians, computers scientists, ope- tions researchers and
practitioners. Nowadays the QAP is widely considered as a classical
combinatorial optimization problem which is (still) attractive from
many points of view. In our opinion there are at last three main
reasons which make the QAP a popular problem in combinatorial
optimization. First, the number of re- life problems which are
mathematically modeled by QAPs has been continuously increasing and
the variety of the fields they belong to is astonishing. To recall
just a restricted number among the applications of the QAP let us
mention placement problems, scheduling, manufacturing, VLSI design,
statistical data analysis, and parallel and distributed computing.
Secondly, a number of other well known c- binatorial optimization
problems can be formulated as QAPs. Typical examples are the
traveling salesman problem and a large number of optimization
problems in graphs such as the maximum clique problem, the graph
partitioning problem and the minimum feedback arc set problem.
Finally, from a computational point of view the QAP is a very
difficult problem. The QAP is not only NP-hard and - hard to
approximate, but it is also practically intractable: it is
generally considered as impossible to solve (to optimality) QAP
instances of size larger than 20 within reasonable time limits.
The quadratic assignment problem (QAP) was introduced in 1957 by
Koopmans and Beckmann to model a plant location problem. Since then
the QAP has been object of numerous investigations by
mathematicians, computers scientists, ope- tions researchers and
practitioners. Nowadays the QAP is widely considered as a classical
combinatorial optimization problem which is (still) attractive from
many points of view. In our opinion there are at last three main
reasons which make the QAP a popular problem in combinatorial
optimization. First, the number of re- life problems which are
mathematically modeled by QAPs has been continuously increasing and
the variety of the fields they belong to is astonishing. To recall
just a restricted number among the applications of the QAP let us
mention placement problems, scheduling, manufacturing, VLSI design,
statistical data analysis, and parallel and distributed computing.
Secondly, a number of other well known c- binatorial optimization
problems can be formulated as QAPs. Typical examples are the
traveling salesman problem and a large number of optimization
problems in graphs such as the maximum clique problem, the graph
partitioning problem and the minimum feedback arc set problem.
Finally, from a computational point of view the QAP is a very
difficult problem. The QAP is not only NP-hard and - hard to
approximate, but it is also practically intractable: it is
generally considered as impossible to solve (to optimality) QAP
instances of size larger than 20 within reasonable time limits.
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