Results 271 to 280 of about 258,840 (301)

Evolutionary computation

Proceedings of the 12th annual conference companion on Genetic and evolutionary computation, 2007
The field of Evolutionary Computation has experienced tremendous growth over the past 20 years, resulting in a wide variety of evolutionary algorithms and applications. The result poses an interesting dilemma for many practitioners in the sense that, with such a wide variety of algorithms and approaches, it is often hard to se the relationships between
S.N. Sivanandam, S.N. Deepa
  +4 more sources

Computational Evolutionary Perception

Perception, 2012
Marr proposed that human vision constructs “a true description of what is there”. He argued that to understand human vision one must discover the features of the world it recovers and the constraints it uses in the process. Bayesian decision theory (BDT) is used in modern vision research as a probabilistic framework for understanding human vision ...
Donald D, Hoffman, Manish, Singh
openaire   +2 more sources

Evolutionary computation

Proceedings of the Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference Companion, 2018
Through an extensive series of experiments over multiple evolutionary algorithm implementations and 25 problems we showed that parameter space tends to be rife with viable parameters, somewhat in contrast with common lore [6].
Moshe Sipper   +3 more
  +4 more sources

Evolutionary Computation

WIREs Computational Statistics, 2009
AbstractThis article provides a brief overview of the field of Evolutionary Computation. It describes the important historical developments that shaped the field. It summarizes the field as it exists today and discusses some of the important directions in which the field is developing.
openaire   +2 more sources

Computational Evolutionary Musicology

2007
The beginning of Chapter 2 offered a sensible definition of music as temporally organized sound. In the broader sense of this definition, one could arguably state that music is not uniquely human. A number of other animals also seem to have music of some sort. Complex vocalizations can be found in many birds (Marler and Slabbekoorn 2004), as well as in
Miranda, E., Todd, P.
openaire   +2 more sources

Evolutionary Computing

2009
The rate at which information overwhelms humans is significantly more than the rate at which humans have learned to process, analyze, and leverage this information. To overcome this challenge, new methods of computing must be formulated, and scientist and engineers have looked to nature for inspiration in developing these new methods.
Thomas E. Potok, Xiaohui Cui, Yu Jiao
openaire   +1 more source

Evolutionary Computation

2000
D. Dumitrescu   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy