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Grammatical Evolution

Michael O’Neill1, Anthony Brabazon2, Miguel Nicolau1, Sean Mc Garraghy2, and Peter Keenan2

1Biocomputing and Developmental Systems Group, University of Limerick, Ireland
Michael.ONeill@ul.ie
Miguel.Nicolau@ul.ie

2University College Dublin, Ireland
Anthony.Brabazon@ucd.ie
john.mcgarraghy@ucd.ie
Peter.Keenan@ucd.ie

Abstract. Grammatical Evolution is presented and its performance on four benchmark problems is reported. Grammatical Evolution is a position-independent variation on Grammatical Evolution’s genotype-phenotype mapping process where the order of derivation sequence steps are no longer applied to nonterminals in a predefined fashion from left to right on the developing program. Instead the genome is used to specify which nonterminal will be developed next, in addition to specifying the rule that will be applied to that nonterminal. Results suggest that the adoption of a more flexible mapping process where the order of non-terminal expansion is not determined a-priori, but instead itself evolved, is beneficial for Grammatical Evolution.

LNCS 3103, p. 617 ff.

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