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  2. Minimum-cost flow problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimum-cost_flow_problem

    The minimum-cost flow problem (MCFP) is an optimization and decision problem to find the cheapest possible way of sending a certain amount of flow through a flow network.A typical application of this problem involves finding the best delivery route from a factory to a warehouse where the road network has some capacity and cost associated.

  3. Gradient descent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gradient_descent

    It is particularly useful in machine learning for minimizing the cost or loss function. [1] Gradient descent should not be confused with local search algorithms, although both are iterative methods for optimization. Gradient descent is generally attributed to Augustin-Louis Cauchy, who first suggested it in 1847. [2]

  4. Assignment problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assignment_problem

    The problem can be solved by reduction to the minimum cost network flow problem. [11] Construct a flow network with the following layers: Layer 1: One source-node s. Layer 2: a node for each agent. There is an arc from s to each agent i, with cost 0 and capacity c i. Level 3: a node for each task.

  5. Graph cuts in computer vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_cuts_in_computer_vision

    Minimization is done using a standard minimum cut algorithm. Due to the max-flow min-cut theorem we can solve energy minimization by maximizing the flow over the network. The max-flow problem consists of a directed graph with edges labeled with capacities, and there are two distinct nodes: the source and the sink. Intuitively, it is easy to see ...

  6. Levenberg–Marquardt algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levenberg–Marquardt...

    The LMA is used in many software applications for solving generic curve-fitting problems. By using the Gauss–Newton algorithm it often converges faster than first-order methods. [6] However, like other iterative optimization algorithms, the LMA finds only a local minimum, which is not necessarily the global minimum.

  7. Out-of-kilter algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Out-of-Kilter_algorithm

    The out-of-kilter algorithm is an algorithm that computes the solution to the minimum-cost flow problem in a flow network. It was published in 1961 by D. R. Fulkerson [1] and is described here. [2] The analog of steady state flow in a network of nodes and arcs may describe a variety of processes.

  8. Frank–Wolfe algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank–Wolfe_algorithm

    The iterations of the algorithm can always be represented as a sparse convex combination of the extreme points of the feasible set, which has helped to the popularity of the algorithm for sparse greedy optimization in machine learning and signal processing problems, [4] as well as for example the optimization of minimum–cost flows in ...

  9. Network flow problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_flow_problem

    The Ford–Fulkerson algorithm, a greedy algorithm for maximum flow that is not in general strongly polynomial; The network simplex algorithm, a method based on linear programming but specialized for network flow [1]: 402–460 The out-of-kilter algorithm for minimum-cost flow [1]: 326–331 The push–relabel maximum flow algorithm, one of the ...