OCLGMLMay 16, 2024

Scalarisation-based risk concepts for robust multi-objective optimisation

arXiv:2405.10221v42 citationsh-index: 18Eur J Oper Res
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This work addresses decision-making under uncertainty for multi-objective optimization, but it is incremental as it builds on existing robust optimization frameworks.

The paper tackles the problem of robust multi-objective optimization by analyzing the non-commutative effects of robustification and scalarization operations, and it demonstrates how to define robust Pareto fronts and performance metrics with case studies on real-world datasets.

Robust optimisation is a well-established framework for optimising functions in the presence of uncertainty. The inherent goal of this problem is to identify a collection of inputs whose outputs are both desirable for the decision maker, whilst also being robust to the underlying uncertainties in the problem. In this work, we study the multi-objective case of this problem. We identify that the majority of all robust multi-objective algorithms rely on two key operations: robustification and scalarisation. Robustification refers to the strategy that is used to account for the uncertainty in the problem. Scalarisation refers to the procedure that is used to encode the relative importance of each objective to a scalar-valued reward. As these operations are not necessarily commutative, the order that they are performed in has an impact on the resulting solutions that are identified and the final decisions that are made. The purpose of this work is to give a thorough exposition on the effects of these different orderings and in particular highlight when one should opt for one ordering over the other. As part of our analysis, we showcase how many existing risk concepts can be integrated into the specification and solution of a robust multi-objective optimisation problem. Besides this, we also demonstrate how one can principally define the notion of a robust Pareto front and a robust performance metric based on our ``robustify and scalarise'' methodology. To illustrate the efficacy of these new ideas, we present two insightful case studies which are based on real-world data sets.

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