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Incremental multiple objective genetic algorithms
This paper presents a new genetic algorithm approach to multi-objective optimization problemsIncremental Multiple Objective Genetic Algorithms (IMOGA). Different from conventional MOGA methods, it takes each objective into consideration incrementally. The whole evolution is divided into as many phases as the number of objectives, and one more objective is considered in each phase. Each phase is composed of two stages: first, an independent population is evolved to optimize one specific objective; second, the better-performing individuals from the evolved single-objective population and the multi-objective population evolved in the last phase are joined together by the operation of integration. The resulting population then becomes an initial multi-objective population, to which a multi-objective evolution based on the incremented objective set is applied. The experiment results show that, in most problems, the performance of IMOGA is better than that of three other MOGAs, NSGA-II, SPEA and PAES. IMOGA can find more solutions during the same time span, and the quality of solutions is better
Incremental Training of a Detector Using Online Sparse Eigen-decomposition
The ability to efficiently and accurately detect objects plays a very crucial
role for many computer vision tasks. Recently, offline object detectors have
shown a tremendous success. However, one major drawback of offline techniques
is that a complete set of training data has to be collected beforehand. In
addition, once learned, an offline detector can not make use of newly arriving
data. To alleviate these drawbacks, online learning has been adopted with the
following objectives: (1) the technique should be computationally and storage
efficient; (2) the updated classifier must maintain its high classification
accuracy. In this paper, we propose an effective and efficient framework for
learning an adaptive online greedy sparse linear discriminant analysis (GSLDA)
model. Unlike many existing online boosting detectors, which usually apply
exponential or logistic loss, our online algorithm makes use of LDA's learning
criterion that not only aims to maximize the class-separation criterion but
also incorporates the asymmetrical property of training data distributions. We
provide a better alternative for online boosting algorithms in the context of
training a visual object detector. We demonstrate the robustness and efficiency
of our methods on handwriting digit and face data sets. Our results confirm
that object detection tasks benefit significantly when trained in an online
manner.Comment: 14 page
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