DocumentCode :
617838
Title :
Attraction basin estimating GA: An adaptive and efficient technique for multimodal optimization
Author :
Zhuoran Xu ; Polojarvi, Mikko ; Yamamoto, Manabu ; Furukawa, M.
Author_Institution :
Grad. Sch. of Inf. Sci. & Technol., Hokkaido Univ., Sapporo, Japan
fYear :
2013
fDate :
20-23 June 2013
Firstpage :
333
Lastpage :
340
Abstract :
Multimodal optimization aims to discover all or most optima as opposed to only the best optimum. Evolutionary Algorithms provide a natural advantage in this field, because they are population based. However, Standard Evolutionary Algorithms tend to converge only to a single optimum. The radius-based niching evolutionary algorithms aim to solve this problem. However, they are criticized for the difficulty of the proper choice of the radius parameter. Detect-multimodal method does not necessitate using the radius parameter. It separates niches by detecting if two solutions are in same optimum. Although robust, the current detect-multimodal based niching method are computationally expensive. Inspired by the idea of combining radius-based niching method and detect-multimodal based niching method, we propose the Attraction Basin Estimating Genetic Algorithm (ABE) in this paper. It estimates the radius which is called attraction basin in this paper using detect-multimodal method, and use the estimated radius to separate species in the same way as radius-based method. We compare the proposed method with a detect-multimodal based method: Topological Species Conservation Algorithm. The experiments demonstrate that ABE has the similar ability to solve multimodal optimization problems as Topological Species Conservation, but significantly more efficiently.
Keywords :
genetic algorithms; topology; ABE; adaptive multimodal optimization technique; attraction basin estimating GA; attraction basin estimating genetic algorithm; detect-multimodal based niching method; radius parameter; radius-based method; radius-based niching evolutionary algorithms; standard evolutionary algorithms; topological species conservation algorithm; Accuracy; Educational institutions; Estimation; Evolutionary computation; Optimization; Sociology; Statistics;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Evolutionary Computation (CEC), 2013 IEEE Congress on
Conference_Location :
Cancun
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0453-2
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0452-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CEC.2013.6557588
Filename :
6557588
Link To Document :
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