Automated Multi-Resolution Approaches in Genetic Algorithms
Almutairi, A
Date: 9 May 2023
Thesis or dissertation
Publisher
University of Exeter
Degree Title
PhD in Computer Science
Abstract
Recent work on multi-resolution optimisation (vary- ing the fidelity of a design during a search) has developed approaches for automated resolution change depending on the population characteristics. This used the standard deviation of the population, or the marginal probability density estimation per variable, to automatically determine ...
Recent work on multi-resolution optimisation (vary- ing the fidelity of a design during a search) has developed approaches for automated resolution change depending on the population characteristics. This used the standard deviation of the population, or the marginal probability density estimation per variable, to automatically determine the resolution to apply to a design in the next generation. In this thesis, we build on this methodology in a number of new directions. We investigate the use of a complete estimated probability density function for resolution determination, enabling the dependencies between variables to be represented. We also explore the use of the multi-resolution transformation to assign a surrogate fitness to population members, but without modifying their location, and discuss the fitness landscape implications of this approach. Re-results are presented on a range of popular uni-objective continuous test functions. Also, the work explores several new directions using Multi-Armed Bandits MAB to guide the resolution used by particular variables, or design space localities, by the quality of designs encountered during the search process. We also discussed the implications of this when comparing algorithms (and efficiently implementing them).
Doctoral Theses
Doctoral College
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