Efficient Active Search for Combinatorial Optimization Problems
This work addresses the computational bottleneck in applying learned models to combinatorial optimization, offering a practical improvement for researchers and practitioners in operations research and AI.
The paper tackles the inefficiency of active search in combinatorial optimization by proposing three strategies that update only a subset of model parameters, resulting in outperforming state-of-the-art machine learning methods and even the LKH3 heuristic on the capacitated vehicle routing problem.
Recently numerous machine learning based methods for combinatorial optimization problems have been proposed that learn to construct solutions in a sequential decision process via reinforcement learning. While these methods can be easily combined with search strategies like sampling and beam search, it is not straightforward to integrate them into a high-level search procedure offering strong search guidance. Bello et al. (2016) propose active search, which adjusts the weights of a (trained) model with respect to a single instance at test time using reinforcement learning. While active search is simple to implement, it is not competitive with state-of-the-art methods because adjusting all model weights for each test instance is very time and memory intensive. Instead of updating all model weights, we propose and evaluate three efficient active search strategies that only update a subset of parameters during the search. The proposed methods offer a simple way to significantly improve the search performance of a given model and outperform state-of-the-art machine learning based methods on combinatorial problems, even surpassing the well-known heuristic solver LKH3 on the capacitated vehicle routing problem. Finally, we show that (efficient) active search enables learned models to effectively solve instances that are much larger than those seen during training.