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Scheduling a Scheduling Competition

Scheduling a Scheduling Competition. ICAPS07 workshop 22 September 2007 Providence, RI, USA. Motivation. Many fields have benefited from the organization of a competition (Planning, SAT, QBF, etc.) Understanding whether this can be the case also in the realm of scheduling

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Scheduling a Scheduling Competition

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  1. Scheduling aScheduling Competition ICAPS07 workshop 22 September 2007 Providence, RI, USA

  2. Motivation • Many fields have benefited from the organization of a competition (Planning, SAT, QBF, etc.) • Understanding whether this can be the case also in the realm of scheduling • Foster cross-fertilization and synergy among researchers with different background areas • Bridge the gap between theory and practice in scheduling • Introducing benchmarks which are grounded on applicative scenarios • The premises for a successful competition need to be discussed and agreed upon Scheduling a Scheduling Competition

  3. Discussion • scheduling competition and its potential benefits to the research community; • how to compare different approaches for solving similar problems; • how to identify common features of problems and algorithms which derive from traditionally different scheduling contexts; • the feasibility of a common evaluation framework for different scheduling approaches. Scheduling a Scheduling Competition

  4. Goal Set up a scheduling competition Scheduling a Scheduling Competition

  5. Program (morning) • 9:00 Welcome • 9:10 “Anatomy of a Scheduling Competition” M. Benedetti, F. Pecora, N. Policella • 9:40 Invited talk: “Can a Competition Be Scientific?” J. Hooker Session A Chair: C. Beck • 11:00 “A Test Bed for Manufacturing Planning and Scheduling: Discussion of Design Principles” C. Le Pape • 11:20 “Challenging Scheduling Problem in the field of System Design” A. Guerri, M. Lombardi, and M. Milano • 11:40 “The Challenge of Sequence-Dependent Setups: Proposal for a Scheduling Competition Track on One Machine Sequencing Problems” V. Cicirello • 12:00 “Which system should I buy? A case study about the QBF solvers competition” C. Ghersi, L. Pulina, and A. Tacchella • 12:20 Wrap-up C. Beck + Short discussion Scheduling a Scheduling Competition

  6. Program (afternoon) Session B Chair: R. Bartak • 14:00 “Analysis of a Benchmark Generator for the Reactive Scheduling Problem” A. Cesta, N. Policella, and R. Rasconi • 14:20 “Benchmark Problems for Oversubscribed Scheduling” L.V. Barbulescu, L.A. Kramer, and S.F. Smith • 14:40 “Space Operations as a Guide for a Real-World Scheduling Competition” E. Romero and M. Oglietti • 15:00 “Towards the Benchmarks for Scheduling Problems” S. Petrovic • 15:10 “The Second International Timetabling Competition (ITC2007): Curriculum-based Course Timetabling (Track 3)” L. Di Gaspero, A. Schaerf, and B. McCollum • 15:20 “What Good is a Scheduling Competition? Insights from the IPC” T. Zimmerman • 15:30 Wrap-up R. Bartak + Short discussion Scheduling a Scheduling Competition

  7. Panel & Discussion • 16:00 Invited speech: “Scheduling 50 years from now” P. van Hentenryck • 16:15 Panel discussion: “Defining an approach to competition implementation” • Panelist: C. Beck, M. Boddy, A. Cesta, A. Davenport, T. Walsh • Moderator: S.F. Smith • Open questions: • Which are the motivations (academic and industrial) for organizing a scheduling competition? • Should the scheduling competition provide a single formal language to represent benchmark instances? • Which tracks should be provided in a scheduling competition? • Is the scheduling competition aimed at evaluating algorithms, systems, or both? • Which measures should be adopted for evaluation? • 17:15 “What’s next?” F. Pecora, N. Policella + open discussion Scheduling a Scheduling Competition

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