An improved harmony search algorithm for solving day-ahead dispatch optimization problems of integrated energy systems considering time-series constraints

2020 ◽  
Vol 229 ◽  
pp. 110477
Author(s):  
Minli Wang ◽  
Tao Zhang ◽  
Peihong Wang ◽  
Xiaolong Chen
2013 ◽  
Vol 365-366 ◽  
pp. 170-173
Author(s):  
Hong Gang Xia ◽  
Qing Zhou Wang ◽  
Li Qun Gao

This paper develops an opposition-based improved harmony search algorithm (OIHS) for solving global continuous optimization problems. The proposed method is different from the classical harmony search (HS) in three aspects. Firstly, the candidate harmony is randomly chosen from the harmony memory or opposition harmony memory was generated by opposition-based learning, which enlarged the algorithm search space. Secondly, two key control parameters, pitch adjustment rate (PAR) and bandwidth distance (bw), are adjusted dynamically with respect to the evolution of the search process. Numerical results demonstrate that the proposed algorithm performs much better than the existing HS variants in terms of the solution quality and the stability.


Author(s):  
Erwin Erwin ◽  
Saparudin Saparudin ◽  
Wulandari Saputri

This paper proposes a new method for image segmentation is hybrid multilevel thresholding and improved harmony search algorithm. Improved harmony search algorithm which is a method for finding vector solutions by increasing its accuracy. The proposed method looks for a random candidate solution, then its quality is evaluated through the Otsu objective function. Furthermore, the operator continues to evolve the solution candidate circuit until the optimal solution is found. The dataset used in this study is the retina dataset, tongue, lenna, baboon, and cameraman. The experimental results show that this method produces the high performance as seen from peak signal-to-noise ratio analysis (PNSR). The PNSR result for retinal image averaged 40.342 dB while for the average tongue image 35.340 dB. For lenna, baboon and cameramen produce an average of 33.781 dB, 33.499 dB, and 34.869 dB. Furthermore, the process of object recognition and identification is expected to use this method to produce a high degree of accuracy.


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