Interesting problems usually can't be solved in closed form or using polynomial algorithms. Shipping companies must exploit non-linear constraints involving profit margins, demand, and volume, and still keep the boats moving. The same goes for optimal substring search for microarray design or optimal DNA design. The people who program the practical solutions to these problems comprise the elite of their technical organization. They combine versatality, imagination, and programming talent. I call them omniheurists -- solvers of all problems.
This course aims to develop your skills as an omniheurist. We will study problems that require heuristics and approximation algorithms. The heuristics include branch and bound, simulated annealing, tabu searching, evolutionary algorithms, and adaptive gradient methods. Approximation algorithms to NP-complete problems will help for subproblems. The problems take minutes to explain but the challenge they pose will keep you busy in a creative way for several hours. I don't promise an easy course, but I believe you will enjoy this class and find it useful.
The goal of this course is to train you to face a new problem, integrate techniques you have learned, arrive at a preliminary solution rapidly, refine it as you learn more about it, and be able to demonstrate (experimentally and sometimes competitively) that the solution is both efficient and close to the best possible.
Prerequsities: this is a course for students who can think creatively about algorithms and are willing to prototype them. I will spend an hour teaching the prototyping language I use (for all of my research) but you are free to use any you like (e.g. python, perl, Java, Ruby even C). R and Matlab may not be fast enough, but you can try.
In the fall of 2018, course problems will be drawn from biological computing, geometry, adversarial game playing, and matchmaking. I will present all necessary domain knowledge in each case. We will have in-class friendly competitions in which the winner receives a small piece of chocolate as a prize. The competitions will involve adversarial games or competitive solutions. For example, you might have to achieve a goal in the context of an adversary who can cause failures or otherwise try to thwart you. The biological computing projects will involve combinatorial problems having to do with verifying DNA sequences using Crick-Watson pairing, the planning of dance movements, the use of combinatorial design for experiments, and so on. At the end, you will be able to face a difficult problem in an area where the domain is not familiar to you, but still be able to contribute a computational solution. You will also learn how to explain your solutions to a small group (because I will make you do it here). I'm told that students who survive this course become friends for life.
You have the option of working alone or in a team of two (but no more). In some cases the problem will be an as yet unanalyzed game and your team's task will be to compete with other teams. The games are games of strategy and full information. A side effect of each effort will be an evolving "Dr Ecco" website, both the newer version as well as an older version that we expect will get many visitors over the years. (On the older version, you have to sign in as guest at the bottom of the page. Certain games require java, however the following work well without: NoTippingGameV2, Dating Game V3, Gravitational Voronoi, Sudokill)
Two members of the class of 2017 worked out a communication infrastructure that architects can use: The git repo for the package is this address It includes a sample auction game as a demo. The code can be installed with 'pip install --user hps-nyu' Only Python specific aspects (i.e. the servers and the Python clients) of the package are installed. The C++ and Java clients need to be copied from the git repo.
Sometimes, you will have a design problem, but in all cases you will work as a member of your team. In addition, an alumnus from 2007, Arefin Huq wrote up his thoughts about how to solve problems. Definitely worth a read.
This is hands-on computer science. I will lecture only on a few topics -- dynamic programming, A description of the superfast language k through the k7 tutorial), a description of the Ken Ross at Columbia.
To take the class, you should love challenging puzzles, enjoy rapid prototyping, and have some sense of concurrent programming (to make use of multi-core chips). You will like the class if you think algorithmically and enjoy translating algorithms into programs. Formally, the only requirement is Fundamental Algorithms or its equivalent. You should have done well however.
For each problem, there will be three relevant classes: Presentation, Discussion, and Competition. So, on class i, I will present problem k, we will discuss k in class i+1 (when problem k+1 will be presented), and there will be a competition for k in class i+2 (when problem k+1 will be discussed and problem k+2 presented). You may have to read the above twice to get it.
For each problem, there will be an Architecture team and Competing Teams. These will be assigned on Presentation night.
Your programs must run and you must have a cogent explanation for what you have done. There are no exams, no papers, and only rare excuses. I expect you to spend about 15 hours a week programming, but you may require more or less.
You will be expected to produce one lasting software artifact as an architect that will eventually go on either on our game website . This should be a functional web-facing piece of software requiring no downloads on the client side (i.e. no security certificates). It should permit clients to play as humans or allow them to play as bots (i.e. through programs). Your source code should be a pleasure to read and come with documentation that makes it easy to modify. That artifact will constitute roughly 1/3 of your grade. You will present it at the student showcase at the end of the fall.
The documentation accompanying the website should also be a pleasure to read. It should consist of a breakdown of the functions, a description of each function's purpose, its inputs, outputs, and side effects. You should write it as you would like documentation should be written.
Folksy (slightly misleading) explanation of genetic algorithms. A hardware-construction application of the genetic algorithm idea. And a short discussion of swarm algorithms.
And here is a very nice simple discussion of gradient descent by Alex Rubinsteyn. Alex won the dating game contest in 2008 by using this technique plus the idea of varying his candidates substantially to get more information, even about negative weights.
Finally, machine learning and clustering can be combined (not necessarily useful for dating but cool nevertheless).
Here are some games (other than ones we played in class) that are already on the drecco site.
Game playing in Artificial Intelligence from the paper by Pantel: "Advanced Adversary Search Algorithms"
Heuristic search algorithm from AI A* description by Justin Heyes-Jones
Genetic Algorithms Tutorial and an example of a genetic algorithm for the knapsack problem implemented in K. Here you can find a genetic algorithm used for compiler optimization.
Chris Poultney's Voronoi game implementation
Here is how to call C from K: Don Orth's description of how to call C from K.
Here is a powerpoint overview of
the game framework in php by Alberto Lerner .
Here is a text description of php
and here are the php pages themselves for tic-tac-toe.
Web page of linear and non-linear programming optimization case studies.
Try diet and cutting stock optimization. Portfolio optimization is also
interesting if you believe the assumptions.
You can find implementation considerations in
Karla Hoffman article on combinatorial optimization using linear, integer
and non-linear programming.
A general reference can be found
here.
A very nice discussion of the relationship among machine learning,
evolutionary computation, and data mining can be found
here.
An excellent site describing research in optimization/operations research
can be found
here.
An article about
student-invented games is here.
The best course I've ever taken but an insane amount of work.
If Courant had a basketball league, our class would be the Harlem
Globetrotters.
Ravi, Prasad, and I [Zeno] are working together still at the same software
company. The founding partners of our company are always raving about
how great it was to have recruited from the heuristics class.
It was more challenge and fun than any other class that I took.
My interview at a company well known for its hard and puzzling
questions was a joke after this class :)
Fast. Intense. Harcore. Huge amount of work.
Totally awesome.
This is the hardest, best class I have ever taken.
It made me weep it was so hard, but I never have learned more
or had so much fun as in this class.
The class is probably the most interesting I've ever taken.
I learned more than in virtually any other course in order to
do the projects, though mostly on my own rather than from the text
or lectures. This also changed my idea of how a course SHOULD be taught
-- namely using competitions and open-ended projects as motivating devices.
I feel I gained more knowledge coding through trial and error than
I have in other courses being told how to do specific algorithms.
This course also showed me not to disregard ideas
as many things performed unexpectedly well.
I really liked the chocolate because it provided me energy when I was
hungry.
Amount of coursework: far too much (but in a good way).
For the difficulty, amount, and pace, I say 4 because notably difficult, but I really enjoyed the
challenge. Best course I have taken here yet. Rather than feeling like I learned new information, I
feel more intelligent overall!
Great course--very good structure in terms of pairing up and playing the role of competitors and
architects. Some of the games had somewhat ambiguous or underspecified rulesets. Also others
seemed to be somewhat overly complex needelessly, so possibly just try to simplify in some cases
for the next offering. Overall they were quite varied and engaging though!
Saurabh Singh on interviews:
Anything which makes people play on an unfamiliar
playing field is a more realistic test - trading
is a very fluid and battlefield type of arena.
Asking "what is your goal in life or
big strength" elicits canned response. No one will say "I am lazy and
careless."
But one look at his attempt at questions from mathematics and
computer science will tell us something about his capability...
the true test is puzzles and programming tests, so in reality anyone who passes YOUR interviews is the smart one
Dennis on why this course is relevant to research:
I have always found it useful to attack a problem from different sides
as if I were a burglar trying to find my way into a house.
If I have to bust through the front door, ok, but there might be
a side window that hasn't been closed completely.
Memorable Quotes