Online Interval Scheduling with Predictions

02/27/2023
by   Joan Boyar, et al.
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In online interval scheduling, the input is an online sequence of intervals, and the goal is to accept a maximum number of non-overlapping intervals. In the more general disjoint path allocation problem, the input is a sequence of requests, each involving a pair of vertices of a known graph, and the goal is to accept a maximum number of requests forming edge-disjoint paths between accepted pairs. These problems have been studied under extreme settings without information about the input or with error-free advice. We study an intermediate setting with a potentially erroneous prediction that specifies the set of intervals/requests forming the input sequence. For both problems, we provide tight upper and lower bounds on the competitive ratios of online algorithms as a function of the prediction error. For disjoint path allocation, our results rule out the possibility of obtaining a better competitive ratio than that of a simple algorithm that fully trusts predictions, whereas, for interval scheduling, we develop a superior algorithm. We also present asymptotically tight trade-offs between consistency (competitive ratio with error-free predictions) and robustness (competitive ratio with adversarial predictions) of interval scheduling algorithms. Finally, we provide experimental results on real-world scheduling workloads that confirm our theoretical analysis.

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