Inferring and exploiting problem structure with schema grammar

被引:0
|
作者
Cox, Chris R. [1 ]
Watson, Richard A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Cox, Chris R.
[2] Watson, Richard A.
来源
| 1600年 / Springer Verlag卷 / 8672期
关键词
Compression algorithms - Estimation of distribution algorithms - Evolutionary search - Fitness landscape - Generative grammar - Grammar induction - Grammatical models - Multivariate patterns;
D O I
10.1007/978-3-319-10762-2_40
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In this work we introduce a model-building algorithm that is able to infer problem structure using generative grammar induction. We define a class of grammar that can represent the structure of a problem space as a hierarchy of multivariate patterns (schemata), and a compression algorithm that can infer an instance of the grammar from a collection of sample individuals. Unlike conventional sequential grammars the rules of the grammar define unordered set-membership productions and are therefore insensitive to gene ordering or physical linkage. We show that when grammars are inferred from populations of fit individuals on shuffled nearest-neighbour NK-landscape problems, there is a correlation between the compressibility of a population and the degree of inherent problem structure. We also demonstrate how the information captured by the grammatical model from a population can aid evolutionary search. By using the lexicon of schemata inferred into a grammar to facilitate variation, we show that a population is able to incrementally learn and then exploit its own structure to find fitter regions of the search space, and ultimately locate the global optimum. © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2014.
引用
收藏
页码:404 / 413
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Inferring User Intent in Web Search by Exploiting Social Annotations
    Conde, Jose M.
    Vallet, David
    Castells, Pablo
    SIGIR 2010: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 33RD ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL ACM SIGIR CONFERENCE ON RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT IN INFORMATION RETRIEVAL, 2010, : 827 - 828
  • [42] Inferring Geographical Partitions by Exploiting User Mobility in Urban Area
    Xiang, Feng
    Huang, Benxiong
    Tu, Lai
    Hu, Duan
    IEICE TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION AND SYSTEMS, 2014, E97D (10) : 2623 - 2631
  • [44] An intelligent matcher for schema mapping problem
    Shiang, Wei-Jung
    Chen, Hsin-Chih
    Rau, Hsin
    PROCEEDINGS OF 2008 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MACHINE LEARNING AND CYBERNETICS, VOLS 1-7, 2008, : 3172 - 3177
  • [45] Schema learning for the cocktail party problem
    Woods, Kevin J. P.
    McDermott, Josh H.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2018, 115 (14) : E3313 - E3322
  • [46] A combined graph schema and graph grammar approach to consistency in distributed modeling
    Gruner, S
    APPLICATIONS OF GRAPH TRANSFORMATIONS WITH INDUSTRIAL RELEVANCE, PROCEEDINGS, 2000, 1779 : 247 - 254
  • [47] The Smallest Grammar Problem Revisited
    Bannai, Hideo
    Hirayama, Momoko
    Hucke, Danny
    Inenaga, Shunsuke
    Jez, Artur
    Lohrey, Markus
    Reh, Carl Philipp
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION THEORY, 2021, 67 (01) : 317 - 328
  • [48] The Smallest Grammar Problem Revisited
    Hucke, Danny
    Lohrey, Markus
    Reh, Carl Philipp
    STRING PROCESSING AND INFORMATION RETRIEVAL, SPIRE 2016, 2016, 9954 : 35 - 49
  • [49] The problem of evil and the grammar of God
    Koistinen, Timo
    NEUE ZEITSCHRIFT FUR SYSTEMATISCHE THEOLOGIE UND RELIGIONSPHILOSOPHIE, 2017, 59 (03): : 394 - 409
  • [50] The Problem of Evil and the Grammar of Goodness
    Wiland, Eric
    RELIGIONS, 2018, 9 (02)