4.6 Article

Leveraging special-purpose hardware for local search heuristics

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL OPTIMIZATION AND APPLICATIONS
Volume 82, Issue 1, Pages 1-29

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10589-022-00354-2

Keywords

Combinatorial optimization; Local search; Ising model; QUBO model; Quadratic assignment problem

Funding

  1. Fujitsu Research of America, Inc.
  2. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)

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With the approach of physical limits predicted by Moore's law, specialized hardware technologies are emerging to tackle specific tasks in different domains, such as adiabatic quantum computers, CMOS annealers, and optical parametric oscillators in the field of combinatorial optimization. Despite the unification of these technologies under the Ising optimization model, a major challenge remains due to limited variable handling capabilities.
As we approach the physical limits predicted by Moore's law, a variety of specialized hardware is emerging to tackle specialized tasks in different domains. Within combinatorial optimization, adiabatic quantum computers, complementary metal-oxide semiconductor annealers, and optical parametric oscillators are a few emerging specialized hardware technologies to solve optimization problems. The Ising optimization model unifies all of these emerging special-purpose hardware for optimization in terms of mathematical framework. In other words, they are all designed to solve optimization problems expressed in the Ising model or equivalently as a quadratic unconstrained binary optimization model. Due to various constraints specific to each type of hardware, they usually suffer from a major challenge: the number of variables that the hardware can manage to solve is very limited. The local search meta-heuristic is one of the approaches to tackle large-scale problems. However, a general optimization step within local search is not traditionally formulated in the Ising form. In this work, we introduce a new modeling framework for modeling local search heuristics for special-purpose hardware. In particular, we propose models that take the limitations of the Ising model and current hardware into account. As such, we demonstrate the advantage of our approach compared to previous methods by carrying out experiments to show that our local search models produce higher-quality solutions.

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