Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Dissertation done!

The big event of the spring was defending and completing the below.
Really happy to be done.

Advice for working professionals attempting a PhD:
1) pick something relevant to your work.
2) think twice about a theoretical topic.
3) don't make it longer/bigger than necessary.
4) don't grow your family during this time

I did not follow this advice and this likely resulted in a 4 year delay. The outcome was great and the topic is now relevant to the new job at Rubicon.

http://nealrichter.com/research/dissertation/

On Mutation and Crossover in the Theory of Evolutionary Algorithms

Abstract:
The Evolutionary Algorithm is a population-based metaheuristic optimization algorithm. The EA employs mutation, crossover and selection operators inspired by biological evolution. It is commonly applied to find exact or approximate solutions to combinatorial search and optimization problems.

This dissertation describes a series of theoretical and experimental studies on a variety of evolutionary algorithms and models of those algorithms. The effects of the crossover and mutation operators are analyzed. Multiple examples of deceptive fitness functions are given where the crossover operator is shown or proven to be detrimental to the speedy optimization of a function. While other research monographs have shown the benefits of crossover on various fitness functions, this is one of the few (or only) doing the inverse.

A background literature review is given of both population genetics and evolutionary computation with a focus on results and opinions on the relative merits of crossover and mutation. Next, a family of new fitness functions is introduced and proven to be difficult for crossover to optimize. This is followed by the construction and evaluation of executable theoretical models of EAs in order to explore the effects of parameterized mutation and crossover.

These models link the EA to the Metropolis-Hastings algorithm. Dynamical systems analysis is performed on models of EAs to explore their attributes and fixed points. Additional crossover deceptive functions are shown and analyzed to examine the movement of fixed points under changing parameters. Finally, a set of online adaptive parameter experiments with common fitness functions is presented.

Finalized April 19, 2010

Posted via email from nealrichter's posterous

3 comments:

Jason Brownlee said...

Congratulations!

The abstract is intriguing, I'm going to make some time to flick through your dissertation.

Anthony said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

Well done Neal - crazy interesting.

This is something I always wanted to look into and this is the perfect occasion.

Keep it up!