Can Kizilkale

2papers

2 Papers

SYDec 12, 2025
Congestion Reduction in EV Charger Placement Using Traffic Equilibrium Models

Semih Kara, Yasin Sonmez, Can Kizilkale et al.

Growing EV adoption can worsen traffic conditions if chargers are sited without regard to their impact on congestion. We study how to strategically place EV chargers to reduce congestion using two equilibrium models: one based on congestion games and one based on an atomic queueing simulation. We apply both models within a scalable greedy station-placement algorithm. Experiments show that this greedy scheme yields optimal or near-optimal congestion outcomes in realistic networks, even though global optimality is not guaranteed as we show with a counterexample. We also show that the queueing-based approach yields more realistic results than the congestion-game model, and we present a unified methodology that calibrates congestion delays from queue simulation and solves equilibrium in link-space.

8.2OCApr 20
Target Mirror Descent: A Unifying Framework for Solving Monotone Variational Inequalities

Yu-Wen Chen, Can Kizilkale, Murat Arcak

It is well known that mirror descent may diverge or cycle on merely monotone variational inequalities. In this paper, we propose \emph{Target Mirror Descent} (TMD), a unified framework that stabilizes monotone flows via a target point correction mechanism in the dual update. By appropriate design choices, TMD recovers the proximal point algorithm, extragradient methods, splitting methods, Brown-von Neumann-Nash dynamics, forward-backward-forward dynamics, and discounted mirror descent as special cases. Thus, we establish a unified perspective on these landmark algorithms and their convergence. Beyond unification, we leverage the TMD framework to correct an equilibrium misalignment in discounted mirror descent and to generalize its higher-order extension beyond interior solutions. Moreover, a key structural feature of TMD is the explicit decoupling of the mirror map from the target determination, which enables \emph{geometric ensembles}: multiple algorithms solve the same problem in parallel using distinct mirror maps, while sharing a common dual update. We show that such an ensemble rigorously reduces to a single TMD with a synthesized mirror map, and thus inherits these convergence guarantees.