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AAAI 1992

An Average-Case Analysis of Branch-and-Bound with Applications: Summary of Results

Conference Paper Problem Solving: Search and Expert Systems Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

Motivated by an anomaly in branch-and-bound (BnB) search, we analyze its average-case complexity. We first delineate exponential vs polynomial average-case complexities of BnB. When best-first BnB is of linear complexity, we show that depth-first BnB has polynomial complexity. For problems on which best-first BnB haa exponential complexity, we obtain an expression for the heuristic branching factor. Next, we apply our analysis to explain an anomaly in lookahead search on sliding-tile puzzles, and to predict the existence of an average-case complexity transition of BnB on the Asymmetric Traveling Salesman Problem. Finally, by formulating IDA* as costbounded BnB, we show its aaverage-case optimality, which also implies that RBFS is optimal on average.

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Context

Venue
AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence
Archive span
1980-2026
Indexed papers
28718
Paper id
83910809367338900