AINov 11, 2025
Variable Neighborhood Search for the Electric Vehicle Routing ProblemDavid Woller, Viktor Kozák, Miroslav Kulich et al.
The Electric Vehicle Routing Problem (EVRP) extends the classical Vehicle Routing Problem (VRP) to reflect the growing use of electric and hybrid vehicles in logistics. Due to the variety of constraints considered in the literature, comparing approaches across different problem variants remains challenging. A minimalistic variant of the EVRP, known as the Capacitated Green Vehicle Routing Problem (CGVRP), was the focus of the CEC-12 competition held during the 2020 IEEE World Congress on Computational Intelligence. This paper presents the competition-winning approach, based on the Variable Neighborhood Search (VNS) metaheuristic. The method achieves the best results on the full competition dataset and also outperforms a more recent algorithm published afterward.
2.5MAApr 28
Should I Replan? Learning to Spot the Right Time in Robust MAPF ExecutionDavid Zahrádka, David Woller, Denisa Mužíková et al.
During the execution of Multi-Agent Path Finding (MAPF) plans in real-life applications, the MAPF assumption that the fleet's movement is perfectly synchronized does not apply. Since one or more of the agents may become delayed due to internal or external factors, it is often necessary to use a robust execution method to avoid collisions caused by desynchronization. Robust execution methods - such as the Action Dependency Graph (ADG) - synchronize the execution of risky actions, but often at the expense of increased plan execution cost, because it may require some agents to wait for the delayed agents. In such cases, the execution's cost can be reduced while still preserving safety by finding a new plan either by rescheduling (reordering the agents at crossroads) or the more general replanning capable of finding new paths. However, these operations may be costly, and the new plan may not even lead to lower execution cost than the original plan: for example, the two plans may be the exact same. Therefore, we estimate the benefit that can be achieved by single replanning in scenarios with delayed agents given an immediate state of the execution with a fully connected feed-forward neural network. The input to the neural network is a set of newly designed ADG-based features describing the robust execution's state and the impact of potential delays, and the output is an estimated benefit achievable by replanning. We train and test the network on a new labeled dataset containing 12,000 experiments, and we show that our proposed method is capable of reducing the impact of delays by up to 94.6% of the achievable reduction.