17,764 research outputs found
Fuzzy Adaptive Tuning of a Particle Swarm Optimization Algorithm for Variable-Strength Combinatorial Test Suite Generation
Combinatorial interaction testing is an important software testing technique
that has seen lots of recent interest. It can reduce the number of test cases
needed by considering interactions between combinations of input parameters.
Empirical evidence shows that it effectively detects faults, in particular, for
highly configurable software systems. In real-world software testing, the input
variables may vary in how strongly they interact, variable strength
combinatorial interaction testing (VS-CIT) can exploit this for higher
effectiveness. The generation of variable strength test suites is a
non-deterministic polynomial-time (NP) hard computational problem
\cite{BestounKamalFuzzy2017}. Research has shown that stochastic
population-based algorithms such as particle swarm optimization (PSO) can be
efficient compared to alternatives for VS-CIT problems. Nevertheless, they
require detailed control for the exploitation and exploration trade-off to
avoid premature convergence (i.e. being trapped in local optima) as well as to
enhance the solution diversity. Here, we present a new variant of PSO based on
Mamdani fuzzy inference system
\cite{Camastra2015,TSAKIRIDIS2017257,KHOSRAVANIAN2016280}, to permit adaptive
selection of its global and local search operations. We detail the design of
this combined algorithm and evaluate it through experiments on multiple
synthetic and benchmark problems. We conclude that fuzzy adaptive selection of
global and local search operations is, at least, feasible as it performs only
second-best to a discrete variant of PSO, called DPSO. Concerning obtaining the
best mean test suite size, the fuzzy adaptation even outperforms DPSO
occasionally. We discuss the reasons behind this performance and outline
relevant areas of future work.Comment: 21 page
A controlled migration genetic algorithm operator for hardware-in-the-loop experimentation
In this paper, we describe the development of an extended migration operator, which combats the negative effects of noise on the effective search capabilities of genetic algorithms. The research is motivated by the need to minimize the num- ber of evaluations during hardware-in-the-loop experimentation, which can carry a significant cost penalty in terms of time or financial expense. The authors build on previous research, where convergence for search methods such as Simulated Annealing and Variable Neighbourhood search was accelerated by the implementation of an adaptive decision support operator. This methodology was found to be effective in searching noisy data surfaces. Providing that noise is not too significant, Genetic Al- gorithms can prove even more effective guiding experimentation. It will be shown that with the introduction of a Controlled Migration operator into the GA heuristic, data, which repre- sents a significant signal-to-noise ratio, can be searched with significant beneficial effects on the efficiency of hardware-in-the- loop experimentation, without a priori parameter tuning. The method is tested on an engine-in-the-loop experimental example, and shown to bring significant performance benefits
Using Differential Evolution for the Graph Coloring
Differential evolution was developed for reliable and versatile function
optimization. It has also become interesting for other domains because of its
ease to use. In this paper, we posed the question of whether differential
evolution can also be used by solving of the combinatorial optimization
problems, and in particular, for the graph coloring problem. Therefore, a
hybrid self-adaptive differential evolution algorithm for graph coloring was
proposed that is comparable with the best heuristics for graph coloring today,
i.e. Tabucol of Hertz and de Werra and the hybrid evolutionary algorithm of
Galinier and Hao. We have focused on the graph 3-coloring. Therefore, the
evolutionary algorithm with method SAW of Eiben et al., which achieved
excellent results for this kind of graphs, was also incorporated into this
study. The extensive experiments show that the differential evolution could
become a competitive tool for the solving of graph coloring problem in the
future
An Inter-molecular Adaptive Collision Scheme for Chemical Reaction Optimization
Optimization techniques are frequently applied in science and engineering
research and development. Evolutionary algorithms, as a kind of general-purpose
metaheuristic, have been shown to be very effective in solving a wide range of
optimization problems. A recently proposed chemical-reaction-inspired
metaheuristic, Chemical Reaction Optimization (CRO), has been applied to solve
many global optimization problems. However, the functionality of the
inter-molecular ineffective collision operator in the canonical CRO design
overlaps that of the on-wall ineffective collision operator, which can
potential impair the overall performance. In this paper we propose a new
inter-molecular ineffective collision operator for CRO for global optimization.
To fully utilize our newly proposed operator, we also design a scheme to adapt
the algorithm to optimization problems with different search space
characteristics. We analyze the performance of our proposed algorithm with a
number of widely used benchmark functions. The simulation results indicate that
the new algorithm has superior performance over the canonical CRO
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