A survey on dynamic populations in bio-inspired algorithms

IF 1.7 3区 计算机科学 Q3 COMPUTER SCIENCE, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines Pub Date : 2024-07-24 DOI:10.1007/s10710-024-09492-4
Davide Farinati, Leonardo Vanneschi
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Abstract

Population-Based Bio-Inspired Algorithms (PBBIAs) are computational methods that simulate natural biological processes, such as evolution or social behaviors, to solve optimization problems. Traditionally, PBBIAs use a population of static size, set beforehand through a specific parameter. Nevertheless, for several decades now, the idea of employing populations of dynamic size, capable of adjusting during the course of a single run, has gained ground. Various methods have been introduced, ranging from simpler ones that use a predefined function to determine the population size variation, to more sophisticated methods where the population size in different phases of the evolutionary process depends on the dynamics of the evolution itself and events occurring within the population during the run. The common underlying idea in many of these approaches, is similar: to save a significant amount of computational effort in phases where the evolution is functioning well, and therefore a large population is not needed. This allows for reusing the previously saved computational effort when optimization becomes more challenging, and hence a greater computational effort is required. Numerous past contributions have demonstrated a notable advantage of using dynamically sized populations, often resulting in comparable results to those obtained by the standard PBBIAs but with a significant saving of computational effort. However, despite the numerous successes that have been presented, to date, there is still no comprehensive collection of past contributions on the use of dynamic populations that allows for their categorization and critical analysis. This article aims to bridge this gap by presenting a systematic literature review regarding the use of dynamic populations in PBBIAs, as well as identifying gaps in the research that can lead the path to future works.

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生物启发算法中的动态种群调查
基于种群的生物启发算法(PBBIAs)是一种模拟自然生物过程(如进化或社会行为)来解决优化问题的计算方法。传统上,PBBIAs 使用的是事先通过特定参数设定好的静态种群规模。然而,数十年来,采用动态规模种群(可在单次运行过程中进行调整)的理念已逐渐深入人心。目前已经出现了多种方法,从使用预定函数确定种群规模变化的简单方法,到进化过程不同阶段的种群规模取决于进化本身的动态和运行过程中种群内发生的事件的复杂方法。许多这些方法的共同基本思想是相似的:在进化过程运行良好的阶段节省大量计算工作,因此不需要大量种群。这样,当优化变得更具挑战性,从而需要更大的计算量时,就可以重新使用之前节省下来的计算量。过去的许多研究成果都证明了使用动态规模种群的显著优势,其结果往往与标准 PBBIAs 得出的结果相当,但却大大节省了计算量。然而,尽管已经取得了众多成功,但迄今为止,仍没有一个关于使用动态种群的全面文献集,可以对其进行分类和批判性分析。本文旨在弥合这一差距,系统回顾了有关在 PBBIA 中使用动态种群的文献,并找出了研究中的不足,为今后的工作指明了方向。
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来源期刊
Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines
Genetic Programming and Evolvable Machines 工程技术-计算机:理论方法
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
3.80%
发文量
19
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: A unique source reporting on methods for artificial evolution of programs and machines... Reports innovative and significant progress in automatic evolution of software and hardware. Features both theoretical and application papers. Covers hardware implementations, artificial life, molecular computing and emergent computation techniques. Examines such related topics as evolutionary algorithms with variable-size genomes, alternate methods of program induction, approaches to engineering systems development based on embryology, morphogenesis or other techniques inspired by adaptive natural systems.
期刊最新文献
Evolving code with a large language model Hga-lstm: LSTM architecture and hyperparameter search by hybrid GA for air pollution prediction A survey on dynamic populations in bio-inspired algorithms GSGP-hardware: instantaneous symbolic regression with an FPGA implementation of geometric semantic genetic programming Geometric semantic GP with linear scaling: Darwinian versus Lamarckian evolution
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