AIAug 24, 2023Code
Job Shop Scheduling Benchmark: Environments and Instances for Learning and Non-learning MethodsRobbert Reijnen, Igor G. Smit, Hongxiang Zhang et al.
Job shop scheduling problems address the routing and sequencing of tasks in a job shop setting. Despite significant interest from operations research and machine learning communities over the years, a comprehensive platform for testing and comparing solution methods has been notably lacking. To fill this gap, we introduce a unified implementation of job shop scheduling problems and their solution methods, addressing the long-standing need for a standardized benchmarking platform in this domain. Our platform supports classic Job Shop (JSP), Flow Shop (FSP), Flexible Job Shop (FJSP), and Assembly Job Shop (AJSP), as well as variants featuring Sequence-Dependent Setup Times (SDST), variants with online arrivals of jobs, and combinations of these problems (e.g., FJSP-SDST and FAJSP). The platfrom provides a wide range of scheduling solution methods, from heuristics, metaheuristics, and exact optimization to deep reinforcement learning. The implementation is available as an open-source GitHub repository, serving as a collaborative hub for researchers, practitioners, and those new to the field. Beyond enabling direct comparisons with existing methods on widely studied benchmark problems, this resource serves as a robust starting point for addressing constrained and complex problem variants. By establishing a comprehensive and unified foundation, this platform is designed to consolidate existing knowledge and to inspire the development of next-generation algorithms in job shop scheduling research.
AIDec 18, 2024
Neural Combinatorial Optimization for Stochastic Flexible Job Shop Scheduling ProblemsIgor G. Smit, Yaoxin Wu, Pavel Troubil et al.
Neural combinatorial optimization (NCO) has gained significant attention due to the potential of deep learning to efficiently solve combinatorial optimization problems. NCO has been widely applied to job shop scheduling problems (JSPs) with the current focus predominantly on deterministic problems. In this paper, we propose a novel attention-based scenario processing module (SPM) to extend NCO methods for solving stochastic JSPs. Our approach explicitly incorporates stochastic information by an attention mechanism that captures the embedding of sampled scenarios (i.e., an approximation of stochasticity). Fed with the embedding, the base neural network is intervened by the attended scenarios, which accordingly learns an effective policy under stochasticity. We also propose a training paradigm that works harmoniously with either the expected makespan or Value-at-Risk objective. Results demonstrate that our approach outperforms existing learning and non-learning methods for the flexible JSP problem with stochastic processing times on a variety of instances. In addition, our approach holds significant generalizability to varied numbers of scenarios and disparate distributions.
AIJun 20, 2024
Graph Neural Networks for Job Shop Scheduling Problems: A SurveyIgor G. Smit, Jianan Zhou, Robbert Reijnen et al.
Job shop scheduling problems (JSSPs) represent a critical and challenging class of combinatorial optimization problems. Recent years have witnessed a rapid increase in the application of graph neural networks (GNNs) to solve JSSPs, albeit lacking a systematic survey of the relevant literature. This paper aims to thoroughly review prevailing GNN methods for different types of JSSPs and the closely related flow-shop scheduling problems (FSPs), especially those leveraging deep reinforcement learning (DRL). We begin by presenting the graph representations of various JSSPs, followed by an introduction to the most commonly used GNN architectures. We then review current GNN-based methods for each problem type, highlighting key technical elements such as graph representations, GNN architectures, GNN tasks, and training algorithms. Finally, we summarize and analyze the advantages and limitations of GNNs in solving JSSPs and provide potential future research opportunities. We hope this survey can motivate and inspire innovative approaches for more powerful GNN-based approaches in tackling JSSPs and other scheduling problems.
ROApr 9, 2024
Learning Efficient and Fair Policies for Uncertainty-Aware Collaborative Human-Robot Order PickingIgor G. Smit, Zaharah Bukhsh, Mykola Pechenizkiy et al.
In collaborative human-robot order picking systems, human pickers and Autonomous Mobile Robots (AMRs) travel independently through a warehouse and meet at pick locations where pickers load items onto the AMRs. In this paper, we consider an optimization problem in such systems where we allocate pickers to AMRs in a stochastic environment. We propose a novel multi-objective Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) approach to learn effective allocation policies to maximize pick efficiency while also aiming to improve workload fairness amongst human pickers. In our approach, we model the warehouse states using a graph, and define a neural network architecture that captures regional information and effectively extracts representations related to efficiency and workload. We develop a discrete-event simulation model, which we use to train and evaluate the proposed DRL approach. In the experiments, we demonstrate that our approach can find non-dominated policy sets that outline good trade-offs between fairness and efficiency objectives. The trained policies outperform the benchmarks in terms of both efficiency and fairness. Moreover, they show good transferability properties when tested on scenarios with different warehouse sizes. The implementation of the simulation model, proposed approach, and experiments are published.