Passer au contenu

/ Département d'informatique et de recherche opérationnelle

Je donne

Rechercher

Navigation secondaire

Data-Driven Optimization: Inverse and Structural Models - Ian Zhu

Data-Driven Optimization: Inverse and Structural Models

Par

Ian Zhu

Université de Toronto

 

Lundi 16 Janvier 2023, 10:30-11:30 EST, Salle AA-6214

Pavillon André-Aisenstadt, Université de Montréal, 2920 Chemin de la Tour

Résumé:

 Optimization models are increasingly used to support decision-making in applications such as transportation, healthcare, energy, and finance. However, designing and fitting these models can be time consuming and data intensive. In this talk, I will present new techniques for fitting optimization models using observed solutions and model outputs. In the first half, I will focus on the use of inverse optimization to estimate objective parameters of discrete optimization problems. Specifically, I propose a new class of algorithms that outperform state-of-the-art methods by orders of magnitude across a wide range of problem domains. In the second half, I will introduce new methods for estimating shadow prices of unobserved constraints in commodity markets. In a case study, I will show how U.S. gasoline price data can be used to estimate the effects of transportation bottlenecks during the 2017 hurricane season.

Biographie :

Ian is a PhD Candidate in Industrial Engineering at the University of Toronto. His research interests broadly lie at the intersection of optimization and data analytics, particularly for understanding and informing decision-making in the context of transportation and operations management. His research has been published in journals such as Operations Research and the INFORMS Journal on Computing. He was a Finalist at the MSOM Student Paper Competition and won First Place at the Canadian OR Society (CORS) Student Paper Competition. Ian also has extensive experience teaching analytics – he has received different teaching awards and has written and published on analytics education