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Adapting Representation in Genetic Programming

Cezary Z. Janikow

Department of Math and Computer Science, University of Missouri–St. Louis, St Louis, MO 63121 USA
cjanikow@ola.cs.umsl.edu

Abstract. Genetic Programming uses trees to represent chromosomes. The user defines the representation space by defining the set of functions and terminals to label the nodes in the trees. The sufficiency principle requires that the set be sufficient to label the desired solution trees. To satisfy this principle, the user is often forced to provide a large set, which unfortunately also enlarges the representation space and thus, the search space. Structure-preserving crossover, STGP, CGP, and CFG-based GP, give the user the power to reduce the space by specifying rules for valid tree construction. However, the user often may not be aware of the best representation space, including heuristics, to solve a particular problem. In this paper, we present a methodology, which extracts and utilizes local heuristics aiming at improving search efficiency. The methodology uses a specific technique for extracting the heuristics, based on tracing first-order (parent-child) distributions of functions and terminals. We illustrate these distributions, and then we present a number of experimental results. ...

LNCS 3103, p. 507 ff.

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