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Dive into the research topics where Sándor Bozóki is active.

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Featured researches published by Sándor Bozóki.


Mathematical and Computer Modelling | 2010

On optimal completion of incomplete pairwise comparison matrices

Sándor Bozóki; János Fülöp; Lajos Rónyai

An important variant of a key problem for multi-attribute decision making is considered. We study the extension of the pairwise comparison matrix to the case when only partial information is available: for some pairs no comparison is given. It is natural to define the inconsistency of a partially filled matrix as the inconsistency of its best, completely filled completion. Here we study the uniqueness problem of the best completion for two weighting methods, the Eigenvector Method and the Logarithmic Least Squares Method. In both settings we obtain the same simple graph theoretic characterization of the uniqueness. The optimal completion will be unique if and only if the graph associated with the partially defined matrix is connected. Some numerical examples are discussed at the end of the paper.


Central European Journal of Operations Research | 2011

On pairwise comparison matrices that can be made consistent by the modification of a few elements

Sándor Bozóki; János Fülöp; Attila Poesz

Pairwise comparison matrices are often used in Multi-attribute Decision Making for weighting the attributes or for the evaluation of the alternatives with respect to a criteria. Matrices provided by the decision makers are rarely consistent and it is important to index the degree of inconsistency. In the paper, the minimal number of matrix elements by the modification of which the pairwise comparison matrix can be made consistent is examined. From practical point of view, the modification of 1, 2, or, for larger matrices, 3 elements seems to be relevant. These cases are characterized by using the graph representation of the matrices. Empirical examples illustrate that pairwise comparison matrices that can be made consistent by the modification of a few elements are present in the applications.


Central European Journal of Operations Research | 2008

Solution of the least squares method problem of pairwise comparison matrices

Sándor Bozóki

The aim of the paper is to present a new global optimization method for determining all the optima of the Least Squares Method (LSM) problem of pairwise comparison matrices. Such matrices are used, e.g., in the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP). Unlike some other distance minimizing methods, LSM is usually hard to solve because of the corresponding nonlinear and non-convex objective function. It is found that the optimization problem can be reduced to solve a system of polynomial equations. Homotopy method is applied which is an efficient technique for solving nonlinear systems. The paper ends by two numerical example having multiple global and local minima.


Mathematical and Computer Modelling | 2011

An LP-based inconsistency monitoring of pairwise comparison matrices

Sándor Bozóki; Jándor Fülöp; Waldemar W. Koczkodaj

A distance-based inconsistency indicator, defined by the third author for the consistency-driven pairwise comparison method, is extended to the incomplete case. The corresponding optimization problem is transformed into an equivalent linear programming problem. The results can be applied in the process of filling in the matrix as the decision maker gets automatic feedback. As soon as a serious error occurs among the matrix elements, even due to a misprint, a significant increase in the inconsistency index is reported. The high inconsistency may be alarmed not only at the end of the process of filling in the matrix but also during the completion process. Numerical examples are also provided.


European Journal of Operational Research | 2014

An application of incomplete pairwise comparison matrices for ranking top tennis players

Sándor Bozóki; László Csató; József Temesi

Pairwise comparison is an important tool in multi-attribute decision making. Pairwise comparison matrices (PCM) have been applied for ranking criteria and for scoring alternatives according to a given criterion. Our paper presents a special application of incomplete PCMs: ranking of professional tennis players based on their results against each other. The selected 25 players have been on the top of the ATP rankings for a shorter or longer period in the last 40 years. Some of them have never met on the court. One of the aims of the paper is to provide ranking of the selected players, however, the analysis of incomplete pairwise comparison matrices is also in the focus. The eigenvector method and the logarithmic least squares method were used to calculate weights from incomplete PCMs. In our results the top three players of four decades were Nadal, Federer and Sampras. Some questions have been raised on the properties of incomplete PCMs and remains open for further investigation.


Annals of Operations Research | 2013

Analysis of pairwise comparison matrices: an empirical research

Sándor Bozóki; Linda Dezső; Attila Poesz; József Temesi

Pairwise comparison (PC) matrices are used in multi-attribute decision problems (MADM) in order to express the preferences of the decision maker. Our research focused on testing various characteristics of PC matrices. In a controlled experiment with university students (N=227) we have obtained 454 PC matrices. The cases have been divided into 18 subgroups according to the key factors to be analyzed. Our team conducted experiments with matrices of different size given from different types of MADM problems. Additionally, the matrix elements have been obtained by different questioning procedures differing in the order of the questions. Results are organized to answer five research questions. Three of them are directly connected to the inconsistency of a PC matrix. Various types of inconsistency indices have been applied. We have found that the type of the problem and the size of the matrix had impact on the inconsistency of the PC matrix. However, we have not found any impact of the questioning order. Incomplete PC matrices played an important role in our research. The decision makers behavioral consistency was as well analyzed in case of incomplete matrices using indicators measuring the deviation from the final order of alternatives and from the final score vector.


Central European Journal of Operations Research | 2011

A simplified implementation of the least squares solution for pairwise comparisons matrices

Marcin Anholcer; Volodymyr Babiy; Sándor Bozóki; Waldemar W. Koczkodaj

This is a follow up to “Solution of the least squares method problem of pairwise comparisons matrix” by Bozóki published by this journal in 2008. Familiarity with this paper is essential and assumed. For lower inconsistency and decreased accuracy, our proposed solutions run in seconds instead of days. As such, they may be useful for researchers willing to use the least squares method instead of the geometric means method.


Computational Geometry: Theory and Applications | 2015

Seven mutually touching infinite cylinders

Sándor Bozóki; Tsung Lin Lee; Lajos Rónyai

We solve a problem of Littlewood: there exist seven infinite circular cylinders of unit radius which mutually touch each other. In fact, we exhibit two such sets of cylinders. Our approach is algebraic and uses symbolic and numerical computational techniques. We consider a system of polynomial equations describing the position of the axes of the cylinders in the 3 dimensional space. To have the same number of equations (namely 20) as the number of variables, the angle of the first two cylinders is fixed to 90 degrees, and a small family of direction vectors is left out of consideration. Homotopy continuation method has been applied to solve the system. The number of paths is about 121 billion, it is hopeless to follow them all. However, after checking 80 million paths, two solutions are found. Their validity, i.e., the existence of exact real solutions close to the approximate solutions at hand, was verified with the alphaCertified method as well as by the interval Krawczyk method.


Central European Journal of Operations Research | 2015

On reducing inconsistency of pairwise comparison matrices below an acceptance threshold

Sándor Bozóki; János Fülöp; Attila Poesz

A recent work of the authors on the analysis of pairwise comparison matrices that can be made consistent by the modification of a few elements is continued and extended. Inconsistency indices are defined for indicating the overall quality of a pairwise comparison matrix. It is expected that serious contradictions in the matrix imply high inconsistency and vice versa. However, in the 35-year history of the applications of pairwise comparison matrices, only one of the indices, namely


Optimization | 2014

Inefficient weights from pairwise comparison matrices with arbitrarily small inconsistency

Sándor Bozóki

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János Fülöp

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Attila Poesz

Corvinus University of Budapest

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József Temesi

Corvinus University of Budapest

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Lajos Rónyai

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Csaba Mészáros

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Tamás Rapcsák

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Kristóf Ábele-Nagy

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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László Csató

Corvinus University of Budapest

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M. Prill

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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