The use of local search suggestion lists for improving the solution of timetable problems with evolutionary algorithms

Author(s):  
Ben Paechter ◽  
Andrew Cumming ◽  
Henri Luchian
Author(s):  
A.C. Martinez-Estudillo ◽  
C. Hervas-Martinez ◽  
F.J. Martinez-Estudillo ◽  
N. Garcia-Pedrajas

Author(s):  
Sanjoy Das

Real world optimization problems are often too complex to be solved through analytic means. Evolutionary algorithms are a class of algorithms that borrow paradigms from nature to address them. These are stochastic methods of optimization that maintain a population of individual solutions, which correspond to points in the search space of the problem. These algorithms have been immensely popular as they are derivativefree techniques, are not as prone to getting trapped in local minima, and can be tailored specifically to suit any given problem. The performance of evolutionary algorithms can be improved further by adding a local search component to them. The Nelder-Mead simplex algorithm (Nelder & Mead, 1965) is a simple local search algorithm that has been routinely applied to improve the search process in evolutionary algorithms, and such a strategy has met with great success. In this article, we provide an overview of the various strategies that have been adopted to hybridize two wellknown evolutionary algorithms - genetic algorithms (GA) and particle swarm optimization (PSO).


2013 ◽  
Vol 705 ◽  
pp. 523-527
Author(s):  
Li Jian ◽  
Cheng Jiu Yin ◽  
Sachio Hirokawa ◽  
Yoshiyuki Tabata

This paper introduces a modified differential evoluiton method to solve the tension/compression string design problem. The modification is derived from mechanisms of social networks. In the proposed method, each individual will be attracted by the knowed best individual following the connectivity between each other. The connectivity is calculated based on the difference of the variables in each vector. The individuals with high connectivity tend to perform local search while those with poor connectivity tend to perform global search instead. The approach was employed for a tension/compression string design problem and by comparisons with the other evolutionary algorithms, the proposed method privided better resutls.


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