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Publications

Publications by José Coelho

2018

6º Retiro Doutoral em Média-Arte Digital

Authors
Marcos, Adérito; Tavares, Mirian; Bidarra, José; Martins, Amílcar; Coelho, José; Carvalho, Elizabeth; Saldanha, Ângela; Mucheroni, Marcos;

Publication

Abstract
Livro de bordo do 6º Retiro Doutoral em Média-Arte Digital – Ad Astra Per Aspera”, Centro Cultural Magalhães Lima, Alfama, Lisboa, 21-27 julho de 2018.

2026

Comparing and extending satisfiability solution methods for the resource-constrained project scheduling problem

Authors
Coelho, J; Vanhoucke, M;

Publication
COMPUTERS & OPERATIONS RESEARCH

Abstract
This paper solves the resource-constrained project scheduling problem (RCPSP) with a satisfiability problem (SAT) solver. This paper builds further on various existing SAT models for this well-known project scheduling problem and extends them with two methods to satisfy the resource constraints. Specifically, we use the wellknown minimal forbidden sets and compare them with the so-called covers that are traditionally used in SAT implementations. Moreover, we also implement an existing binary decision trees approach under various settings and extend the model with networks with adders, so far never used for solving the RCPSP, to guarantee that resource constraints are satisfied. The algorithms are tested under different settings on a set of 13,413 project instances with diverse network and resource structures, and the experiments demonstrate that a combination of these approaches help in finding better solutions within a reasonable time. Moreover, 393 new lower bounds, 62 new upper bounds, and 290 optimally solved instances (including 18 from the PSPLIB) have been discovered, which, to the best of our knowledge, had not been found before. The strong performance of the new algorithm motivated additional experiments, and the preliminary results suggest several promising directions for future research.

2025

Comparison of two problem transformation-based methods in detecting the best performing branch-and-bound procedures for the RCPSP

Authors
Guo, WK; Vanhoucke, M; Coelho, J;

Publication
EXPERT SYSTEMS WITH APPLICATIONS

Abstract
The branch-and-bound (B&B) procedure is one of the most frequently used methods for solving the resource-constrained project scheduling problem (RCPSP) to obtain optimal solutions and has a rich history in the academic literature. Over the past decades, various variants of this procedure have been proposed, each using slightly different configurations to search for the optimal solution. While most of the configurations perform relatively well for many problem instances, there is, however, no known universal best B&B configuration that works well for all problem instances. In this work, we propose two problem transformation-based machine learning classification methods (binary relevance and classifier chains) to automatically detect the best-performing branch-and-bound configuration for the resource-constrained project scheduling problem. The proposed novel learning models aim to find the relationship between the project characteristics and the performance of a specific B&B configuration. With this obtained knowledge, the best-performing B&B configurations can be predicted, resulting in a better solution. A comprehensive computational experiment is conducted to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed classification models and the performance improvements over three categories of methods from the literature, including the latest branch-and-bound configurations, the state-of-the-art classification models in project scheduling, and commonly used clustering algorithms in machine learning. The results show that the proposed classification models can enhance solution quality for the RCPSP without changing the core components of existing algorithms. More specifically, the classifier chains method, when combined with the Back-Propagation Neural Network algorithm, achieves the best performance, outperforming binary relevance, which demonstrates the impact of label correlation on the performance. The experiments also demonstrate the merits of the proposed model in improving the robustness of the solutions. Furthermore, these findings not only highlight the potential of the classification models in detecting best-performing B&B configurations, but also emphasize the need for future work and development to further improve the performance and applicability of these models. © 2025 The Authors

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