Solving high school timetabling problems worldwide using selection hyper-heuristics

Leena N. Ahmed, Ender Özcan, Ahmed Kheiri*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

High school timetabling is one of those recurring NP-hard real-world combinatorial optimisation problems that has to be dealt with by many educational institutions periodically, and so has been of interest to practitioners and researchers. Solving a high school timetabling problem requires scheduling of resources and events into time slots subject to a set of constraints. Recently, an international competition, referred to as ITC 2011 was organised to determine the state-of-the-art approach for high school timetabling. The problem instances, obtained from eight different countries across the world used in this competition became a benchmark for further research in the field. Selection hyper-heuristics are general-purpose improvement methodologies that control/mix a given set of low level heuristics during the search process. In this study, we evaluate the performance of a range of selection hyper-heuristics combining different reusable components for high school timetabling. The empirical results show the success of the approach which embeds an adaptive great-deluge move acceptance method on the ITC 2011 benchmark instances. This selection hyper-heuristic ranks the second among the previously proposed approaches including the ones competed at ITC 2011.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5463-5471
Number of pages9
JournalExpert Systems with Applications
Volume42
Issue number13
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2015

Keywords

  • Adaptive move acceptance
  • Adaptive operator selection
  • Combinatorial optimisation
  • Constraint satisfaction
  • Educational timetabling
  • Great deluge

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