3,554 research outputs found
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Handling boundary constraints for particle swarm optimization in high-dimensional search space
Despite the fact that the popular particle swarm optimizer (PSO) is currently being extensively applied to many real-world problems that often have high-dimensional and complex fitness landscapes, the effects of boundary constraints on PSO have not attracted adequate attention in the literature. However, in accordance with the theoretical analysis in [11], our numerical experiments show that particles tend to fly outside of the boundary in the first few iterations at a very high probability in high-dimensional search spaces. Consequently, the method used to handle boundary violations is critical to the performance of PSO. In this study, we reveal that the widely used random and absorbing bound-handling schemes may paralyze PSO for high-dimensional and complex problems. We also explore in detail the distinct mechanisms responsible for the failures of these two bound-handling schemes. Finally, we suggest that using high-dimensional and complex benchmark functions, such as the composition functions in [19], is a prerequisite to identifying the potential problems in applying PSO to many real-world applications because certain properties of standard benchmark functions make problems inexplicit. © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
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A new evolutionary search strategy for global optimization of high-dimensional problems
Global optimization of high-dimensional problems in practical applications remains a major challenge to the research community of evolutionary computation. The weakness of randomization-based evolutionary algorithms in searching high-dimensional spaces is demonstrated in this paper. A new strategy, SP-UCI is developed to treat complexity caused by high dimensionalities. This strategy features a slope-based searching kernel and a scheme of maintaining the particle population's capability of searching over the full search space. Examinations of this strategy on a suite of sophisticated composition benchmark functions demonstrate that SP-UCI surpasses two popular algorithms, particle swarm optimizer (PSO) and differential evolution (DE), on high-dimensional problems. Experimental results also corroborate the argument that, in high-dimensional optimization, only problems with well-formative fitness landscapes are solvable, and slope-based schemes are preferable to randomization-based ones. © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
Generating Interpretable Fuzzy Controllers using Particle Swarm Optimization and Genetic Programming
Autonomously training interpretable control strategies, called policies,
using pre-existing plant trajectory data is of great interest in industrial
applications. Fuzzy controllers have been used in industry for decades as
interpretable and efficient system controllers. In this study, we introduce a
fuzzy genetic programming (GP) approach called fuzzy GP reinforcement learning
(FGPRL) that can select the relevant state features, determine the size of the
required fuzzy rule set, and automatically adjust all the controller parameters
simultaneously. Each GP individual's fitness is computed using model-based
batch reinforcement learning (RL), which first trains a model using available
system samples and subsequently performs Monte Carlo rollouts to predict each
policy candidate's performance. We compare FGPRL to an extended version of a
related method called fuzzy particle swarm reinforcement learning (FPSRL),
which uses swarm intelligence to tune the fuzzy policy parameters. Experiments
using an industrial benchmark show that FGPRL is able to autonomously learn
interpretable fuzzy policies with high control performance.Comment: Accepted at Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference 2018
(GECCO '18
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A solution to the crucial problem of population degeneration in high-dimensional evolutionary optimization
Three popular evolutionary optimization algorithms are tested on high-dimensional benchmark functions. An important phenomenon responsible for many failures - population degeneration - is discovered. That is, through evolution, the population of searching particles degenerates into a subspace of the search space, and the global optimum is exclusive from the subspace. Subsequently, the search will tend to be confined to this subspace and eventually miss the global optimum. Principal components analysis (PCA) is introduced to discover population degeneration and to remedy its adverse effects. The experiment results reveal that an algorithm's efficacy and efficiency are closely related to the population degeneration phenomenon. Guidelines for improving evolutionary algorithms for high-dimensional global optimization are addressed. An application to highly nonlinear hydrological models demonstrates the efficacy of improved evolutionary algorithms in solving complex practical problems. © 2011 IEEE
Hybridization of multi-objective deterministic particle swarm with derivative-free local searches
The paper presents a multi-objective derivative-free and deterministic global/local hybrid algorithm for the efficient and effective solution of simulation-based design optimization (SBDO) problems. The objective is to show how the hybridization of two multi-objective derivative-free global and local algorithms achieves better performance than the separate use of the two algorithms in solving specific SBDO problems for hull-form design. The proposed method belongs to the class of memetic algorithms, where the global exploration capability of multi-objective deterministic particle swarm optimization is enriched by exploiting the local search accuracy of a derivative-free multi-objective line-search method. To the authors best knowledge, studies are still limited on memetic, multi-objective, deterministic, derivative-free, and evolutionary algorithms for an effective and efficient solution of SBDO for hull-form design. The proposed formulation manages global and local searches based on the hypervolume metric. The hybridization scheme uses two parameters to control the local search activation and the number of function calls used by the local algorithm. The most promising values of these parameters were identified using forty analytical tests representative of the SBDO problem of interest. The resulting hybrid algorithm was finally applied to two SBDO problems for hull-form design. For both analytical tests and SBDO problems, the hybrid method achieves better performance than its global and local counterparts
Chaotic Quantum Double Delta Swarm Algorithm using Chebyshev Maps: Theoretical Foundations, Performance Analyses and Convergence Issues
Quantum Double Delta Swarm (QDDS) Algorithm is a new metaheuristic algorithm
inspired by the convergence mechanism to the center of potential generated
within a single well of a spatially co-located double-delta well setup. It
mimics the wave nature of candidate positions in solution spaces and draws upon
quantum mechanical interpretations much like other quantum-inspired
computational intelligence paradigms. In this work, we introduce a Chebyshev
map driven chaotic perturbation in the optimization phase of the algorithm to
diversify weights placed on contemporary and historical, socially-optimal
agents' solutions. We follow this up with a characterization of solution
quality on a suite of 23 single-objective functions and carry out a comparative
analysis with eight other related nature-inspired approaches. By comparing
solution quality and successful runs over dynamic solution ranges, insights
about the nature of convergence are obtained. A two-tailed t-test establishes
the statistical significance of the solution data whereas Cohen's d and Hedge's
g values provide a measure of effect sizes. We trace the trajectory of the
fittest pseudo-agent over all function evaluations to comment on the dynamics
of the system and prove that the proposed algorithm is theoretically globally
convergent under the assumptions adopted for proofs of other closely-related
random search algorithms.Comment: 27 pages, 4 figures, 19 table
Global Trajectory Optimisation : Can We Prune the Solution Space When Considering Deep Space Manoeuvres? [Final Report]
This document contains a report on the work done under the ESA/Ariadna study 06/4101 on the global optimization of space trajectories with multiple gravity assist (GA) and deep space manoeuvres (DSM). The study was performed by a joint team of scientists from the University of Reading and the University of Glasgow
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