15,909 research outputs found
How Good are Genetic Algorithms at Finding Large Cliques: An Experimental Study
This paper investigates the power of genetic algorithms at solving the MAX-CLIQUE problem. We measure the performance of a standard genetic algorithm on an elementary set of problem instances consisting of embedded cliques in random graphs. We indicate the need for improvement, and introduce a new genetic algorithm, the multi-phase annealed GA, which exhibits superior performance on the same problem set.
As we scale up the problem size and test on \hard" benchmark instances, we notice a
degraded performance in the algorithm caused by premature convergence to local minima. To alleviate this problem, a sequence of modi cations are implemented ranging from changes in input representation to systematic local search. The most recent version, called union GA, incorporates the features of union cross-over, greedy replacement, and diversity enhancement. It shows a marked speed-up in the number of iterations required to find a given solution, as well as some improvement in the clique size found.
We discuss issues related to the SIMD implementation of the genetic algorithms on a Thinking Machines CM-5, which was necessitated by the intrinsically high time complexity (O(n3)) of the serial algorithm for computing one iteration.
Our preliminary conclusions are: (1) a genetic algorithm needs to be heavily customized to work "well" for the clique problem; (2) a GA is computationally very expensive, and its use is only recommended if it is known to find larger cliques than other algorithms; (3) although our customization e ort is bringing forth continued improvements, there is no clear evidence, at this time, that a GA will have better success in circumventing local minima.NSF (CCR-9204284
Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking in Two Coupled Nanomechanical Electron Shuttles
We present spontaneous symmetry breaking in a nanoscale version of a setup
prolific in classical mechanics: two coupled nanomechanical pendulums. The two
pendulums are electron shuttles fabricated as nanopillars and placed between
two capacitor plates in a homogeneous electric field. Instead of being
mechanically coupled through a spring they exchange electrons, i.e. they
shuttle electrons from the source to the drain 'capacitor plate'. Nonzero DC
current through this system by external AC excitation is caused via dynamical
symmetry breaking. This symmetry-broken current appears at sub- and
superharmonics of the fundamental mode of the coupled system
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