4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Survivable network design under optimal and heuristic interdiction scenarios

Journal

JOURNAL OF GLOBAL OPTIMIZATION
Volume 38, Issue 2, Pages 181-199

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10898-006-9067-3

Keywords

network design; integer programming; network interdiction; game theory

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We examine the problem of building or fortifying a network to defend against enemy attacks in various scenarios. In particular, we examine the case in which an enemy can destroy any portion of any arc that a designer constructs on the network, subject to some interdiction budget. This problem takes the form of a three-level, two-player game, in which the designer acts first to construct a network and transmit an initial set of flows through the network. The enemy acts next to destroy a set of constructed arcs in the designer's network, and the designer acts last to transmit a final set of flows in the network. Most studies of this nature assume that the enemy will act optimally; however, in real-world scenarios one cannot necessarily assume rationality on the part of the enemy. Hence, we prescribe optimal network design algorithms for three different profiles of enemy action: an enemy destroying arcs based on capacities, based on initial flows, or acting optimally to minimize our maximum profits obtained from transmitting flows.

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