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Introductory courses in combinatorial optimization are popular at
the upper undergraduate/graduate levels in computer science,
industrial engineering, and business management/OR, owed to its
wide applications in these fields. There are several published
textbooks that treat this course and the authors have used many of
them in their own teaching experiences. This present text fills a
gap and is organized with a stress on methodology and relevant
content, providing a step-by-step approach for the student to
become proficient in solving combinatorial optimization problems.
Applications and problems are considered via recent technology
developments including wireless communication, cloud computing,
social networks, and machine learning, to name several, and the
reader is led to the frontiers of combinatorial optimization. Each
chapter presents common problems, such as minimum spanning tree,
shortest path, maximum matching, network flow, set-cover, as well
as key algorithms, such as greedy algorithm, dynamic programming,
augmenting path, and divide-and-conquer. Historical notes, ample
exercises in every chapter, strategically placed graphics, and an
extensive bibliography are amongst the gems of this textbook.
Multiwavelength Optical Networks systematically studies the major
research issues in WDM (Wavelength Division Multiplexing) optical
networks, such as routing and wavelength assignment, QoS multicast
routing, design of logical topologies, and placement of wavelength
converters. The book consists of two parts. The first part studies
the fundamental concepts and principles of WDM networks. The second
part discusses advanced and research issues of WDM networks.
The authors of the book have many years of working experience in
the areas of computer networks and network optimization. The book
discusses many difficult issues of WDM networks in a very
comprehensive way. For each problem, there is a background
discussion, and then the mathematical formulation, followed by the
solutions.
This book is intended to be used as a textbook for graduate
students studying theoretical computer science. It can also be used
as a reference book for researchers in the area of design and
analysis of approximation algorithms. Design and Analysis of
Approximation Algorithms is a graduate course in theoretical
computer science taught widely in the universities, both in the
United States and abroad. There are, however, very few textbooks
available for this course. Among those available in the market,
most books follow a problem-oriented format; that is, they
collected many important combinatorial optimization problems and
their approximation algorithms, and organized them based on the
types, or applications, of problems, such as geometric-type
problems, algebraic-type problems, etc. Such arrangement of
materials is perhaps convenient for a researcher to look for the
problems and algorithms related to his/her work, but is difficult
for a student to capture the ideas underlying the various
algorithms. In the new book proposed here, we follow a more
structured, technique-oriented presentation. We organize
approximation algorithms into different chapters, based on the
design techniques for the algorithms, so that the reader can study
approximation algorithms of the same nature together. It helps the
reader to better understand the design and analysis techniques for
approximation algorithms, and also helps the teacher to present the
ideas and techniques of approximation algorithms in a more unified
way.
Multiwavelength Optical Networks systematically studies the major
research issues in WDM (Wavelength Division Multiplexing) optical
networks, such as routing and wavelength assignment, QoS multicast
routing, design of logical topologies, and placement of wavelength
converters. The book consists of two parts. The first part studies
the fundamental concepts and principles of WDM networks. The second
part discusses advanced and research issues of WDM networks.
The authors of the book have many years of working experience in
the areas of computer networks and network optimization. The book
discusses many difficult issues of WDM networks in a very
comprehensive way. For each problem, there is a background
discussion, and then the mathematical formulation, followed by the
solutions.
The 14th Annual International Computing and Combinatorics
Conference, CO- COON2008, tookplaceinDalian, China,
June27-29,2008.PastCOCOONc- ferences were held in Xi'an (1995),
Hong Kong (1996), Shanghai (1997), Taipei (1998), Tokyo (1999),
Sydney (2000), Guilin (2001), Singapore (2002), Montana (2003),
Jeju Island (2004), Kunming (2005), Taipei (2006), and Alberta
(2007). COCOON 2008 provided a forum for researchers working in the
areas of - gorithms, theory of computation, computational
complexity, and combinatorics related to computing. The Program
Committee received 172 submissions from 26 countries and regions:
Canada, Australia, Austria, Brazil, China, Denmark, France,
Germany, HongKong, Hungary, India, Iran, Israel, Japan, Korea,
Mexico, Morocco, Netherlands, Pakistan, Singapore, Spain,
Switzerland, Taiwan, Ukraine, the UK, and USA. With the help of 116
external referees, each submission was reviewed by at least two
Program Committee members or external referees. Of the 172 subm-
sions,66paperswereselectedforpresentationintheconferenceandareincluded
in this volume. Some of these will be selected for publication in a
special issue of Algorithmica and a special issue of the Journal of
Combinatorial Optimization under the standard refereeing procedure.
In addition to the selected papers, the conference also included
two invited presentations by Der-Tsai Lee (Academia Sinica, Taiwan)
and Takao Nishizeki (Tohoku University, Japan). The best paper
awards were given for "Visual Cryptography on Graphs" to Lu,
Manchala and Ostrovsky, and for "A Linear Programming Duality -
proach to Analyzing Strictly Nonblocking d-ary Multilog Networks
under G- eral Crosstalk Constraints" to Ngo, Wang and Le.
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