scholarly journals Noise tolerance for real-time evolutionary learning of cooperative predator-prey strategies

Author(s):  
Mark Wittkamp ◽  
Luigi Barone ◽  
Philip Hingston ◽  
Lyndon While
2021 ◽  
Vol 31 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alix Marie d’Avigneau ◽  
Sumeetpal S. Singh ◽  
Lawrence M. Murray

AbstractDeveloping efficient MCMC algorithms is indispensable in Bayesian inference. In parallel tempering, multiple interacting MCMC chains run to more efficiently explore the state space and improve performance. The multiple chains advance independently through local moves, and the performance enhancement steps are exchange moves, where the chains pause to exchange their current sample amongst each other. To accelerate the independent local moves, they may be performed simultaneously on multiple processors. Another problem is then encountered: depending on the MCMC implementation and inference problem, local moves can take a varying and random amount of time to complete. There may also be infrastructure-induced variations, such as competing jobs on the same processors, which arises in cloud computing. Before exchanges can occur, all chains must complete the local moves they are engaged in to avoid introducing a potentially substantial bias (Proposition 1). To solve this issue of randomly varying local move completion times in multi-processor parallel tempering, we adopt the Anytime Monte Carlo framework of (Murray, L. M., Singh, S., Jacob, P. E., and Lee, A.: Anytime Monte Carlo. arXiv preprintarXiv:1612.03319, (2016): we impose real-time deadlines on the parallel local moves and perform exchanges at these deadlines without any processor idling. We show our methodology for exchanges at real-time deadlines does not introduce a bias and leads to significant performance enhancements over the naïve approach of idling until every processor’s local moves complete. The methodology is then applied in an ABC setting, where an Anytime ABC parallel tempering algorithm is derived for the difficult task of estimating the parameters of a Lotka–Volterra predator-prey model, and similar efficiency enhancements are observed.


1995 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 355-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Paredis

This article proposes a general framework for the use of coevolution to boost the performance of genetic search. It combines coevolution with yet another biologically inspired technique, called lifetime fitness evaluation (LTFE). Two unrelated problems—neural net learning and constraint satisfaction—are used to illustrate the approach. Both problems use predator-prey interactions to boost the search. In contrast with traditional “single population” genetic algorithms (GAs), two populations constantly interact and coevolve. However, the same algorithm can also be used with different types of coevolutionary interactions. As an example, the symbiotic coevolution of solutions and genetic representations is shown to provide an elegant solution to the problem of finding a suitable genetic representation. The approach presented here greatly profits from the partial and continuous nature of LTFE. Noise tolerance is one advantage. Even more important, LTFE is ideally suited to deal with coupled fitness landscapes typical for coevolution.


2015 ◽  
Vol 253 ◽  
pp. 78-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
James C. Wilson ◽  
Mitch Kesler ◽  
Sara-Lynn E. Pelegrin ◽  
LeAnna Kalvi ◽  
Aaron Gruber ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Electronics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. 1367 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhonghua Guo ◽  
Meng Zhang ◽  
Dah-Jye Lee

This paper reports the development of an efficient evolutionary learning algorithm designed specifically for real-time embedded visual inspection applications. The proposed evolutionary learning algorithm constructs image features as a series of image transforms for image classification and is suitable for resource-limited systems. This algorithm requires only a small number of images and time for training. It does not depend on handcrafted features or manual tuning of parameters and is generalized to be versatile for visual inspection applications. This allows the system to be configured on the fly for different applications and by an operator without extensive experience. An embedded vision system, equipped with an ARM processor running Linux, is capable of performing at roughly one hundred 640 × 480 frames per second which is more than adequate for real-time visual inspection applications. As example applications, three image datasets were created to test the performance of this algorithm. The first dataset was used to demonstrate the suitability of the algorithm for visual inspection automation applications. This experiment combined two applications to make it a more challenging test. One application was for separating fertilized and unfertilized eggs. The other one was for detecting two common defects on the eggshell. Two other datasets were created for road condition classification and pavement quality evaluation. The proposed algorithm was 100% for fertilized egg detection and 98.6% for eggshell quality inspection for a combined 99.1% accuracy. It had an accuracy of 92% for the road condition classification and 100% for pavement quality evaluation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (12) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan T. Lang ◽  
Jacob Tatz ◽  
Eric M. Kercher ◽  
Akilan Palanisami ◽  
Dana H. Brooks ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharmila Venugopal ◽  
Soju Seki ◽  
David H Terman ◽  
Antonios Pantazis ◽  
Riccardo Olcese ◽  
...  

Uncertainties pose an ongoing challenge for information processing in the nervous system. It is not entirely clear how neurons maintain dynamic stability of information, encoded in the temporal features of spike trains, notwithstanding stochastic influences. Here we examined the contribution of subclasses of membrane sodium currents in real-time noise modulation in sensory neurons. Fast sodium (Na+) currents are essential for spike generation, and a persistent Na+ current can entrain preferred input frequencies via membrane resonance. Using mathematical modeling, theory and experiments, we show that a resurgent Na+ current can stabilize the temporal features of burst discharge and confer noise tolerance. These novel insights reckon the role of biophysical properties of Na+ currents beyond mere spike generation. Instead, these mechanisms might be how neurons perform real-time signal processing to maintain order and entropy in neural discharge. Our model analysis further predicts a negative feedback loop in the molecular machinery of an underlying Nav1.6-type Na+ channel gating considered in this study.


1979 ◽  
Vol 44 ◽  
pp. 41-47
Author(s):  
Donald A. Landman

This paper describes some recent results of our quiescent prominence spectrometry program at the Mees Solar Observatory on Haleakala. The observations were made with the 25 cm coronagraph/coudé spectrograph system using a silicon vidicon detector. This detector consists of 500 contiguous channels covering approximately 6 or 80 Å, depending on the grating used. The instrument is interfaced to the Observatory’s PDP 11/45 computer system, and has the important advantages of wide spectral response, linearity and signal-averaging with real-time display. Its principal drawback is the relatively small target size. For the present work, the aperture was about 3″ × 5″. Absolute intensity calibrations were made by measuring quiet regions near sun center.


Author(s):  
Alan S. Rudolph ◽  
Ronald R. Price

We have employed cryoelectron microscopy to visualize events that occur during the freeze-drying of artificial membranes by employing real time video capture techniques. Artificial membranes or liposomes which are spherical structures within internal aqueous space are stabilized by water which provides the driving force for spontaneous self-assembly of these structures. Previous assays of damage to these structures which are induced by freeze drying reveal that the two principal deleterious events that occur are 1) fusion of liposomes and 2) leakage of contents trapped within the liposome [1]. In the past the only way to access these events was to examine the liposomes following the dehydration event. This technique allows the event to be monitored in real time as the liposomes destabilize and as water is sublimed at cryo temperatures in the vacuum of the microscope. The method by which liposomes are compromised by freeze-drying are largely unknown. This technique has shown that cryo-protectants such as glycerol and carbohydrates are able to maintain liposomal structure throughout the drying process.


Author(s):  
R.P. Goehner ◽  
W.T. Hatfield ◽  
Prakash Rao

Computer programs are now available in various laboratories for the indexing and simulation of transmission electron diffraction patterns. Although these programs address themselves to the solution of various aspects of the indexing and simulation process, the ultimate goal is to perform real time diffraction pattern analysis directly off of the imaging screen of the transmission electron microscope. The program to be described in this paper represents one step prior to real time analysis. It involves the combination of two programs, described in an earlier paper(l), into a single program for use on an interactive basis with a minicomputer. In our case, the minicomputer is an INTERDATA 70 equipped with a Tektronix 4010-1 graphical display terminal and hard copy unit.A simplified flow diagram of the combined program, written in Fortran IV, is shown in Figure 1. It consists of two programs INDEX and TEDP which index and simulate electron diffraction patterns respectively. The user has the option of choosing either the indexing or simulating aspects of the combined program.


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