4.5 Article

The Stochastic Bilevel Continuous Knapsack Problem with Uncertain Follower's Objective

Journal

JOURNAL OF OPTIMIZATION THEORY AND APPLICATIONS
Volume 194, Issue 2, Pages 521-542

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10957-022-02037-8

Keywords

Bilevel optimization; Stochastic optimization; Complexity

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

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We consider a stochastic version of a bilevel continuous knapsack problem, where the leader aims to optimize the expected value of a linear objective function while the follower's profits are uncertain. We show that the stochastic problem is tractable when the possible scenarios are explicitly given, and provide pseudo-polynomial time algorithms for the case of independently and uniformly distributed item values.
We consider a bilevel continuous knapsack problem where the leader controls the capacity of the knapsack, while the follower chooses a feasible packing maximizing his own profit. The leader's aim is to optimize a linear objective function in the capacity and in the follower's solution, but with respect to different item values. We address a stochastic version of this problem where the follower's profits are uncertain from the leader's perspective, and only a probability distribution is known. Assuming that the leader aims at optimizing the expected value of her objective function, we first observe that the stochastic problem is tractable as long as the possible scenarios are given explicitly as part of the input, which also allows to deal with general distributions using a sample average approximation. For the case of independently and uniformly distributed item values, we show that the problem is #P-hard in general, and the same is true even for evaluating the leader's objective function. Nevertheless, we present pseudo-polynomial time algorithms for this case, running in time linear in the total size of the items. Based on this, we derive an additive approximation scheme for the general case of independently distributed item values, which runs in pseudo-polynomial time.

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