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When Does a Dynamic Programming Formulation Guarantee the Existence of a Fully Polynomial Time Approximation Scheme (FPTAS)?
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Citations
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References
2000
Year
Mathematical ProgrammingNumerical AnalysisEngineeringFollowing FlavorComputational ComplexityDiscrete OptimizationOperations ResearchDiscrete MathematicsCombinatorial OptimizationApproximation TheoryCombinatorial Optimization ProblemPerformance GuaranteeCombinatorial ProblemComputer ScienceScheduling ProblemOptimization ProblemConvex OptimizationDynamic ProgrammingScheduling (Production Processes)Approximation MethodApproximability ResultsDynamic Optimization
We derive results of the following flavor: If a combinatorial optimization problem can be formulated via a dynamic program of a certain structure and if the involved cost and transition functions satisfy certain arithmetical and structural conditions, then the optimization problem automatically possesses a fully polynomial time approximation scheme (FPTAS). Our characterizations provide a natural and uniform approach to fully polynomial time approximation schemes. We illustrate their strength and generality by deducing from them the existence of FPTASs for a multitude of scheduling problems. Many known approximability results follow as corollaries from our main result.
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