22 research outputs found

    Hyper-selection in dynamic environments

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    This article is posted here with permission from IEEE - Copyright @ 2008 IEEEIn recent years, several approaches have been developed for genetic algorithms to enhance their performance in dynamic environments. Among these approaches, one kind of methods is to adapt genetic operators in order for genetic algorithms to adapt to a new environment. This paper investigates the effect of the selection pressure on the performance of genetic algorithms in dynamic environments. A hyper-selection scheme is proposed for genetic algorithms, where the selection pressure is temporarily raised whenever the environment changes. The hyper-selection scheme can be combined with other approaches for genetic algorithms in dynamic environments. Experiments are carried out to investigate the effect of different selection pressures on the performance of genetic algorithms in dynamic environments and to investigate the effect of the hyper-selection scheme on the performance of genetic algorithms in combination with several other schemes in dynamic environments. The experimental results indicate that the effect of the hyper-selection scheme depends on the problem under consideration and other schemes combined in genetic algorithms.This work was supported by UK EPSRC under Grant No. EP/E060722/1 and Brazil FAPESP under Grant Proc. 04/04289-6

    Evolution strategies with q-Gaussian mutation for dynamic optimization problems

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    This article is posted here with permmission from IEEE - Copyright @ 2010 IEEEEvolution strategies with q-Gaussian mutation, which allows the self-adaptation of the mutation distribution shape, is proposed for dynamic optimization problems in this paper. In the proposed method, a real parameter q, which allows to smoothly control the shape of the mutation distribution, is encoded in the chromosome of the individuals and is allowed to evolve. In the experimental study, the q-Gaussian mutation is compared to Gaussian and Cauchy mutation on four experiments generated from the simulation of evolutionary robots.This work was supported by FAPESP, Brazil, and by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council(EP/E060722/1), UK

    Self-adaptation of mutation distribution in evolutionary algorithms

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    This paper is posted here with permission from IEEE - Copyright @ 2007 IEEEThis paper proposes a self-adaptation method to control not only the mutation strength parameter, but also the mutation distribution for evolutionary algorithms. For this purpose, the isotropic g-Gaussian distribution is employed in the mutation operator. The g-Gaussian distribution allows to control the shape of the distribution by setting a real parameter g and can reproduce either finite second moment distributions or infinite second moment distributions. In the proposed method, the real parameter q of the g-Gaussian distribution is encoded in the chromosome of an individual and is allowed to evolve. An evolutionary programming algorithm with the proposed idea is presented. Experiments were carried out to study the performance of the proposed algorithm

    Evolutionary programming with q-Gaussian mutation for dynamic optimization problems

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    This article is posted here with permission from IEEE - Copyright @ 2008 IEEEThe use of evolutionary programming algorithms with self-adaptation of the mutation distribution for dynamic optimization problems is investigated in this paper. In the proposed method, the q-Gaussian distribution is employed to generate new candidate solutions by mutation. A real parameter q, which defines the shape of the distribution, is encoded in the chromosome of individuals and is allowed to evolve. Algorithms with self-adapted mutation generated from isotropic and anisotropic distributions are presented. In the experimental study, the q-Gaussian mutation is compared to Gaussian and Cauchy mutation on three dynamic optimization problems.This work was supported by Brazil FAPESP under Grant 04/04289-6 and UK EPSRC under Grant No. EP/E060722/01

    Continuous dynamic problem generators for evolutionary algorithms

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    This article is posted here with permission from IEEE - Copyright @ 2007 IEEEAddressing dynamic optimization problems has attracted a growing interest from the evolutionary algorithm community in recent years due to its importance in the applications of evolutionary algorithms in real world problems. In order to study evolutionary algorithms in dynamic environments, one important work is to develop benchmark dynamic environments. This paper proposes two continuous dynamic problem generators. Both generators use linear transformation to move individuals, which preserves the distance among individuals. In the first generator, the linear transformation of individuals is equivalent to change the direction of some axes of the search space while in the second one it is obtained by successive rotations in different planes. Preliminary experiments were carried out to study the performance of some standard genetic algorithms in continuous dynamic environments created by the proposed generators

    Genetic algorithms with self-organized criticality for dynamic optimization problems

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    This paper proposes a genetic algorithm (GA) with random immigrants for dynamic optimization problems where the worst individual and its neighbours are replaced every generation. In this GA, the individuals interact with each other and, when their fitness is close, as in the case where the diversity level is low, one single replacement can affect a large number of individuals. This simple approach can take the system to a kind of self-organization behavior, known as self-organized criticality (SOC), which is useful to maintain the diversity of the population in dynamic environments and hence allows the GA to escape from local optima when the problem changes. The experimental results show that the proposed GA presents the phenomenon of SOC

    Memory based on abstraction for dynamic fitness functions

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    Copyright @ Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2008.This paper proposes a memory scheme based on abstraction for evolutionary algorithms to address dynamic optimization problems. In this memory scheme, the memory does not store good solutions as themselves but as their abstraction, i.e., their approximate location in the search space. When the environment changes, the stored abstraction information is extracted to generate new individuals into the population. Experiments are carried out to validate the abstraction based memory scheme. The results show the efficiency of the abstraction based memory scheme for evolutionary algorithms in dynamic environments.This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) of UK under Grant No. EP/E060722/1

    A particle swarm optimization based memetic algorithm for dynamic optimization problems

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    Copyright @ Springer Science + Business Media B.V. 2010.Recently, there has been an increasing concern from the evolutionary computation community on dynamic optimization problems since many real-world optimization problems are dynamic. This paper investigates a particle swarm optimization (PSO) based memetic algorithm that hybridizes PSO with a local search technique for dynamic optimization problems. Within the framework of the proposed algorithm, a local version of PSO with a ring-shape topology structure is used as the global search operator and a fuzzy cognition local search method is proposed as the local search technique. In addition, a self-organized random immigrants scheme is extended into our proposed algorithm in order to further enhance its exploration capacity for new peaks in the search space. Experimental study over the moving peaks benchmark problem shows that the proposed PSO-based memetic algorithm is robust and adaptable in dynamic environments.This work was supported by the National Nature Science Foundation of China (NSFC) under Grant No. 70431003 and Grant No. 70671020, the National Innovation Research Community Science Foundation of China under Grant No. 60521003, the National Support Plan of China under Grant No. 2006BAH02A09 and the Ministry of Education, science, and Technology in Korea through the Second-Phase of Brain Korea 21 Project in 2009, the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) of UK under Grant EP/E060722/01 and the Hong Kong Polytechnic University Research Grants under Grant G-YH60
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