6533b827fe1ef96bd12865e9

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Heuristics for the Constrained Incremental Graph Drawing Problem

Tommaso PastoreAntonio NapoletanoPaola FestaRafael MartíAnna Martínez-gavara

subject

Theoretical computer scienceOptimization problemCombinatorial optimizationInformation Systems and ManagementGeneral Computer ScienceComputer science0211 other engineering and technologiesHeuristicMetaheuristic02 engineering and technologyManagement Science and Operations ResearchIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringGraph drawing0502 economics and business050210 logistics & transportation021103 operations researchHeuristic05 social sciencesComputer Science (all)SolverGraphVertex (geometry)VisualizationGraph drawingModeling and SimulationCombinatorial optimizationHeuristicsMathematicsofComputing_DISCRETEMATHEMATICS

description

Abstract Visualization of information is a relevant topic in Computer Science, where graphs have become a standard representation model, and graph drawing is now a well-established area. Within this context, edge crossing minimization is a widely studied problem given its importance in obtaining readable representations of graphs. In this paper, we focus on the so-called incremental graph drawing problem, in which we try to preserve the user’s mental map when obtaining successive drawings of the same graph. In particular, we minimize the number of edge crossings while satisfying some constraints required to preserve the position of vertices with respect to previous drawings. We propose heuristic methods to obtain high-quality solutions to this optimization problem in the short computational times required for graph drawing applications. We also propose a mathematical programming formulation and obtain the optimal solution for small and medium instances. Our extensive experimentation shows the merit of our proposal with respect to both optimal solutions obtained with CPLEX and heuristic solutions obtained with LocalSolver , a well-known black-box solver in combinatorial optimization.

10.1016/j.ejor.2018.10.017http://hdl.handle.net/11588/729620