In the field of Evolutionary Computation, a common myth that “An Evolutionary Algorithm (EA) will outperform a local search algorithm, given enough runtime and a large-enough population” exists. We believe that this is not necessarily true and challenge the statement with several simple considerations. We then investigate the population size parameter of EAs, as this is the element in the above claim that can be controlled. We conduct a related work study, which substantiates the assumption that there should be an optimal setting for the population size at which a specific EA would perform best on a given problem instance and computational budget. Subsequently, we carry out a large-scale experimental study on 68 instances of the Traveling S...
International audienceIn this work we study the effects of population size on selection and performa...
This paper identifies five distinct mechanisms by which a population-based algorithm might have an a...
International audienceIn this work we study the effects of population size on selection and performa...
AbstractThe utilization of populations is one of the most important features of evolutionary algorit...
Evolutionary algorithms (EAs) are population-based randomized search heuristics that often solve pro...
Abstract. Evolutionary Algorithms (EAs) are population-based ran-domized optimizers often solving pr...
AbstractEvolutionary algorithms (EAs) find numerous applications, and practical knowledge on EAs is ...
AbstractThe utilization of populations is one of the most important features of evolutionary algorit...
Abstract. Usually Evolutionary Algorithms keep the size of the population fixed. Nevertheless, in Ev...
Abstract. In this paper we evaluate on-the-fly population (re)sizing mechanisms for evolutionary alg...
Small populations are very desirable for reducing the required computational resources in evolutiona...
Almost all analyses of time complexity of evolutionary algorithms (EAs) have been conducted for (1 +...
Almost all analyses of time complexity of evolutionary algorithms (EAs) have been conducted for (1 +...
AbstractEvolutionary algorithms (EAs) find numerous applications, and practical knowledge on EAs is ...
International audienceIn this work we study the effects of population size on selection and performa...
International audienceIn this work we study the effects of population size on selection and performa...
This paper identifies five distinct mechanisms by which a population-based algorithm might have an a...
International audienceIn this work we study the effects of population size on selection and performa...
AbstractThe utilization of populations is one of the most important features of evolutionary algorit...
Evolutionary algorithms (EAs) are population-based randomized search heuristics that often solve pro...
Abstract. Evolutionary Algorithms (EAs) are population-based ran-domized optimizers often solving pr...
AbstractEvolutionary algorithms (EAs) find numerous applications, and practical knowledge on EAs is ...
AbstractThe utilization of populations is one of the most important features of evolutionary algorit...
Abstract. Usually Evolutionary Algorithms keep the size of the population fixed. Nevertheless, in Ev...
Abstract. In this paper we evaluate on-the-fly population (re)sizing mechanisms for evolutionary alg...
Small populations are very desirable for reducing the required computational resources in evolutiona...
Almost all analyses of time complexity of evolutionary algorithms (EAs) have been conducted for (1 +...
Almost all analyses of time complexity of evolutionary algorithms (EAs) have been conducted for (1 +...
AbstractEvolutionary algorithms (EAs) find numerous applications, and practical knowledge on EAs is ...
International audienceIn this work we study the effects of population size on selection and performa...
International audienceIn this work we study the effects of population size on selection and performa...
This paper identifies five distinct mechanisms by which a population-based algorithm might have an a...
International audienceIn this work we study the effects of population size on selection and performa...