51,021 research outputs found
On algorithm selection, with an application to combinatorial search problems
The Algorithm Selection Problem is to select the most appropriate way for solving a problem given a choice of different ways. Some of the most prominent and successful applications come from Artificial Intelligence and in particular combinatorial search problems. Machine Learning has established itself as the de facto way of tackling the Algorithm Selection Problem. Yet even after a decade of intensive research, there are no established guidelines as to what kind of Machine Learning to use and how.
This dissertation presents an overview of the field of Algorithm Selection and associated research and highlights the fundamental questions left open and problems facing practitioners. In a series of case studies, it underlines the difficulty of doing Algorithm Selection in practice and tackles issues related to this. The case studies apply Algorithm Selection techniques to new problem domains and show how to achieve significant performance improvements. Lazy learning in constraint solving and the implementation of the alldifferent constraint are the areas in which we improve on the performance of current state of the art systems. The case studies furthermore provide empirical evidence for the effectiveness of using the misclassification penalty as an input to Machine Learning.
After having established the difficulty, we present an effective technique for reducing it. Machine Learning ensembles are a way of reducing the background knowledge and experimentation required from the researcher while increasing the robustness of the system. Ensembles do not only decrease the difficulty, but can also increase the performance of Algorithm Selection systems. They are used to much the same ends in Machine Learning itself.
We finally tackle one of the great remaining challenges of Algorithm Selection -- which Machine Learning technique to use in practice. Through a large-scale empirical evaluation on diverse data taken from Algorithm Selection applications in the literature, we establish recommendations for Machine Learning algorithms that are likely to perform well in Algorithm Selection for combinatorial search problems. The recommendations are based on strong empirical evidence and additional statistical simulations.
The research presented in this dissertation significantly reduces the knowledge threshold for researchers who want to perform Algorithm Selection in practice. It makes major contributions to the field of Algorithm Selection by investigating fundamental issues that have been largely ignored by the research community so far
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
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Local search: A guide for the information retrieval practitioner
There are a number of combinatorial optimisation problems in information retrieval in which the use of local search methods are worthwhile. The purpose of this paper is to show how local search can be used to solve some well known tasks in information retrieval (IR), how previous research in the field is piecemeal, bereft of a structure and methodologically flawed, and to suggest more rigorous ways of applying local search methods to solve IR problems. We provide a query based taxonomy for analysing the use of local search in IR tasks and an overview of issues such as fitness functions, statistical significance and test collections when conducting experiments on combinatorial optimisation problems. The paper gives a guide on the pitfalls and problems for IR practitioners who wish to use local search to solve their research issues, and gives practical advice on the use of such methods. The query based taxonomy is a novel structure which can be used by the IR practitioner in order to examine the use of local search in IR
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