Summary: | Online computation is a model for formulating decision making under uncertainty. In an online problem, the algorithm does not know the entire input from the beginning; the input is revealed in a sequence of steps. At each step, the algorithm should make its decisions based on
the past and without any knowledge about the future. Many important real-life problems such as robot navigation are intrinsically online and thus the design and analysis of online algorithms is one of the main research areas in theoretical computer science.
Competitive analysis is the standard measure for analysis of online algorithms. It has been applied to many online problems in diverse areas ranging from robot navigation, to network routing, to scheduling, to online graph coloring. In this thesis, we first survey three classic online problems, namely the cow-path problem, the Processor-Allocation problem and the
Robots-Search-Rays problem and highlight connections between them.
Second, the main result is for the One-Robot-Searches-Two-Rays problem for which we consider the weighted scenario, in which the robot is located on a ray with a preferential probability p. We term the One-Robot-Searches-Two-Rays-And-Weighted problem as 1-STRAW (and in general k-STRAW for k searchers).
In the 1-STRAW problem, we propose a search strategy which is optimal among weighted
geometric states. In addition, we prove a tight lower bound of the worst case competitive ratio and conjecture a lower bound of the average case competitive ratio for the 1-STRAW problem.
Additionally, we compare our search strategy and its performance with the doubling strategy and the SmartCow algorithm.
|