PIMS | UCalgary Distinguished Lecture: Tamás Terlaky
Topic
Big Data Analytics and Operations Research:
The Inmate Assignment and Scheduling Problem and its Application in the PA Department of Corrections
Speakers
Details
The inmate assignment project is a highly successful prescriptive analytics project. It was conducted in close collaboration with the PA Dept. of Corrections, took five years from start to successful implementation. Our novel Inmate Assignment Decision Support System (IADSS) is designed with the main goal of simultaneously, and system-wide optimally, assigning the inmates to the correctional institutions. IADSS includes a new hierarchical multi-objective MILO model, which accurately describes the inmate assignment problem. This is the first time that OR methodologies have been used to optimize the operations, and built into the routine business practice, of a correctional system, thus it opens a rich and untouched area for the application of OR.
This project was awarded the 2017 Daniel H. Wagner Prize for Excellence in Operations Research Practice by INFORMS.
Joint work with:
M. Shahabsafa, C. Gudapati, A. Sharma, L. Plebani, G.R. Wilson, Lehigh University
K. B. Bucklen, Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
Short Course in Conjunction with Lecture:
In conjunction with the lecture on May 17, we are offering a short course on Big Data Analytics and Operations Research, to be held May 14-16, 2018. Please register for the course by contacting Melissa Wrubleski at mwrubles@ucalgary.ca no later than Friday, May 11. Full details of the course are as follows:
Date: May 14-16, 2018
Time: 9:30am-11:30am
Location: MS 371
Title: Modern convex optimization: Duality, Algorithms, Solutions and Interpretations
Scope: Duality provides optimality conditions and serve as the platform of algorithm design. First we focus on duality in linear optimization (LO) and convex conic linear optimization (CLO) problems. CLO includes LO, second order conic and semidefinite optimization problems.
Then algorithmic concepts, such as simplex algorithms and interior point (IPMs) are discussed. Initialization of the algorithms, the computational cost and efficient computation of an iterative step, and characteristics of the produced optimal solutions are discussed. As time allows available software packages, sensitivity analysis, and some applications will be discussed.
Additional Information
When: May 17, 2018
Time: 2:00-3:00pm
Where: EEEL 161 (The University of Calgary)
Tamás Terlaky
George N. and Soteria Kledaras '87 Endowed Chair Professor.
Dept. Industrial and Systems Engineering,
Lehigh University, Bethlehem, PA
Prior to his appointment at Lehigh U., where he served as the Chair of ISE 2008-2017, Prof. Terlaky has taught at Eötvös U., Budapest, Hungary; Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands; McMaster U., ON, Canada. At McMaster he was a Canada Research Chair in Optimization, and also served as the founding Director of the School of Computational Engineering and Science.
Prof. Terlaky has published four books, edited over ten books and journal special issues and published over 180 research papers. Topics include theoretical and algorithmic foundations of mathematical optimization (e.g., invention of the criss-cross method, oriented matroid programming), design and analysis of large classes of interior point methods, computational optimization, worst case examples of the central path, nuclear reactor core reloading optimization, oil refinery and VLSI design and robust radiation therapy treatment optimization, and inmate assignment optimization.
Prof. Terlaky is Founding Honorary Editor-in-Chief of the journal, Optimization and Engineering. He has served as associate editor of ten journals and has served as conference chair, conference organizer, and distinguished invited speaker at conferences all over the world. He was general Chair of the INFORMS 2015 Annual Meeting, a former Chair of INFORMS' Optimization Society, Chair of the ICCOPT Steering Committee of the Mathematical Optimization Society, currently Chair of the SIAM Activity Group on Optimization, he is Fellow of the Fields Institute, and Fellow of INFORMS. He received the MITACS Mentorship Award for his distinguished graduate student supervisory record, and the Award of Merit of the Canadian Operations Research Society. November 2017 he received the Wagner Prize of INFORMS and the Egerváry Award of the Hungarian Operations Research Society. He is class of 2018 Fellow of SIAM.
His research interest includes high performance optimization algorithms, optimization modeling and its applications.