9 research outputs found

    CSM-467: Quotient Geometric Crossovers

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    Geometric crossover is a representation-independent definition of crossover based on the distance of the search space interpreted as a metric space. It generalizes the traditional crossover for binary strings and other important recombination operators for the most frequently used representations. Using a distance tailored to the problem at hand, the abstract definition of crossover can be used to design new problem specific crossovers that embed problem knowledge in the search. In previous work we have started studying how metric transformations of the distance associated with geometric crossover affect the original geometric crossover. In particular, we focused on the product of metric spaces. This metric transformation gives rise to the notion of product geometric crossover that allows to build new geometric crossovers combining pre-existing geometric crossovers in a simple way. In this paper, we study another metric transformation, the quotient metric space, that gives rise to the notion of quotient geometric crossover. This turns out to be a very versatile notion. We give many examples of application of the quotient geometric crossover

    A Mathematical Unification of Geometric Crossovers Defined on Phenotype Space

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    Geometric crossover is a representation-independent definition of crossover based on the distance of the search space interpreted as a metric space. It generalizes the traditional crossover for binary strings and other important recombination operators for the most frequently used representations. Using a distance tailored to the problem at hand, the abstract definition of crossover can be used to design new problem specific crossovers that embed problem knowledge in the search. This paper is motivated by the fact that genotype-phenotype mapping can be theoretically interpreted using the concept of quotient space in mathematics. In this paper, we study a metric transformation, the quotient metric space, that gives rise to the notion of quotient geometric crossover. This turns out to be a very versatile notion. We give many example applications of the quotient geometric crossover

    Geometric particle swarm optimization for the sudoku puzzle

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    Geometric particle swarm optimization (GPSO) is a recently introduced generalization of traditional particle swarm optimization (PSO) that applies to all combinatorial spaces. The aim of this paper is to demonstrate the applicability of GPSO to non-trivial combinatorial spaces. The Sudoku puzzle is a perfect candidate to test new algorithmic ideas because it is entertaining and instructive as well as a nontrivial constrained combinatorial problem. We apply GPSO to solve the sudoku puzzle

    Geometric generalisation of surrogate model-based optimisation to combinatorial and program spaces

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    Open access journalSurrogate models (SMs) can profitably be employed, often in conjunction with evolutionary algorithms, in optimisation in which it is expensive to test candidate solutions. The spatial intuition behind SMs makes them naturally suited to continuous problems, and the only combinatorial problems that have been previously addressed are those with solutions that can be encoded as integer vectors. We show how radial basis functions can provide a generalised SM for combinatorial problems which have a geometric solution representation, through the conversion of that representation to a different metric space. This approach allows an SM to be cast in a natural way for the problem at hand, without ad hoc adaptation to a specific representation. We test this adaptation process on problems involving binary strings, permutations, and tree-based genetic programs. © 2014 Yong-Hyuk Kim et al

    Mathematical Interpretation between Genotype and Phenotype Spaces and Induced Geometric Crossovers

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    In this paper, we present that genotype-phenotype mapping can be theoretically interpreted using the concept of quotient space in mathematics. Quotient space can be considered as mathematically-defined phenotype space in the evolutionary computation theory. The quotient geometric crossover has the effect of reducing the search space actually searched by geometric crossover, and it introduces problem knowledge in the search by using a distance better tailored to the specific solution interpretation. Quotient geometric crossovers are directly applied to the genotype space but they have the effect of the crossovers performed on phenotype space. We give many example applications of the quotient geometric crossover

    Geometric Generalisation of Surrogate Model-Based Optimisation to Combinatorial and Program Spaces

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    Surrogate models (SMs) can profitably be employed, often in conjunction with evolutionary algorithms, in optimisation in which it is expensive to test candidate solutions. The spatial intuition behind SMs makes them naturally suited to continuous problems, and the only combinatorial problems that have been previously addressed are those with solutions that can be encoded as integer vectors. We show how radial basis functions can provide a generalised SM for combinatorial problems which have a geometric solution representation, through the conversion of that representation to a different metric space. This approach allows an SM to be cast in a natural way for the problem at hand, without ad hoc adaptation to a specific representation. We test this adaptation process on problems involving binary strings, permutations, and tree-based genetic programs

    Geometric Crossover for Biological Sequences

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    This paper extends a geometric framework for interpreting crossover and mutation [4] to the case of sequences. This representation is important because it is the link between artificial evolution and biological evolution. We define and theoretically study geometric crossover for sequences under edit distance and show its intimate connection with the biological notion of sequence homology
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