4.5 Article

Solving the prize-collecting Euclidean Steiner tree problem

Journal

INTERNATIONAL TRANSACTIONS IN OPERATIONAL RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 3, Pages 1479-1501

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/itor.12853

Keywords

prize-collecting Steiner tree; prize-collecting Euclidean Steiner tree; node weighted geometric Steiner tree

Funding

  1. 2015 Gilbert Rigg Scholarship
  2. 2016 John Collier Scholarship

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The PCEST problem is a generalization of the EST problem, where the solution connects a subset of given points to maximize the net value of the network. The algorithmic framework includes efficient methods for determining subsets of points that must be in every solution, subsets of points that cannot be in any solution, and methods for generating and concatenating full Steiner trees.
The prize-collecting Euclidean Steiner tree (PCEST) problem is a generalization of the well-known Euclidean Steiner tree (EST) problem. All points given in an EST problem instance are connected by the shortest possible network in a solution. A solution can include additional points called Steiner points. A PCEST problem instance differs from an EST problem instance by the addition of weights for each given point. A PCEST solution connects a subset of the given points in order to maximize the net value of the network (the sum of the selected point weights, less than the length of the network). We present an algorithmic framework for solving the PCEST problem. Included in the framework are efficient methods to determine subsets of points that must be in every solution, and subsets of points that cannot be in any solution. Also included are methods to generate and concatenate full Steiner trees.

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