Hardness of and approximate mechanism design for the bike rebalancing problem

Hongtao Lv, Fan Wu, Tie Luo, Xiaofeng Gao, Guihai Chen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Recently arose in the flourishing sharing economy, the bike rebalancing problem is a new challenge that concerns how to incentivize users to park bikes at system-desired locations that better meet bike demands. It can also be generalized to other location-based vehicle or tool sharing problems such as car, truck, drone, and trolley sharing. In this paper, we address this problem using an auction model under a crowdsourcing framework, where users report their original destinations and the bike sharing platform assigns proper relocation tasks to them in order to better balance the bike supply and demand. We first prove two impossibility results: (1) finding an optimal solution to the bike rebalancing problem is NP-hard, and (2) there is no approximate mechanism with bounded approximation ratio that is both truthful and budget-feasible. To overcome this barrier, we introduce two practical constraints and design a two-stage approximate mechanism that satisfies location truthfulness, budget feasibility, individual rationality, and achieves constant approximation ratio. To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to address two dimensional location truthfulness in the regime of mechanism design. In addition, our extensive experiments based on real-world dataset demonstrate that our proposed mechanism can effectively redress the imbalance of bike distribution.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)105-115
Number of pages11
JournalTheoretical Computer Science
Volume803
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 10 2020

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier B.V.

Funding

This work was supported in part by the National Key R&D Program of China 2018YFB1004703, in part by China NSF grant 61672348 and 61672353, in part by the Open Project Program of the State Key Laboratory of Mathematical Engineering and Advanced Computing 2018A09, and in part by Alibaba Group through Alibaba Innovation Research Program. The opinions, findings, conclusions, and recommendations expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the funding agencies or the government.

FundersFunder number
NSF of China61672348, 61672353
National Key Basic Research Program of China2018YFB1004703
China State Key Laboratory of Mathematical Engineering and Advanced Computing2018A09

    Keywords

    • Approximate mechanism
    • Location truthfulness
    • Sharing economy

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Theoretical Computer Science
    • General Computer Science

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