Genetic Algorithms and Engineering OptimizationA comprehensive guide to a powerful new analytical tool by two of its foremost innovators The past decade has witnessed many exciting advances in the use of genetic algorithms (GAs) to solve optimization problems in everything from product design to scheduling and client/server networking. Aided by GAs, analysts and designers now routinely evolve solutions to complex combinatorial and multiobjective optimization problems with an ease and rapidity unthinkable withconventional methods. Despite the continued growth and refinement of this powerful analytical tool, there continues to be a lack of up-to-date guides to contemporary GA optimization principles and practices. Written by two of the world's leading experts in the field, this book fills that gap in the literature. Taking an intuitive approach, Mitsuo Gen and Runwei Cheng employ numerous illustrations and real-world examples to help readers gain a thorough understanding of basic GA concepts-including encoding, adaptation, and genetic optimizations-and to show how GAs can be used to solve an array of constrained, combinatorial, multiobjective, and fuzzy optimization problems. Focusing on problems commonly encountered in industry-especially in manufacturing-Professors Gen and Cheng provide in-depth coverage of advanced GA techniques for: * Reliability design * Manufacturing cell design * Scheduling * Advanced transportation problems * Network design and routing Genetic Algorithms and Engineering Optimization is an indispensable working resource for industrial engineers and designers, as well as systems analysts, operations researchers, and management scientists working in manufacturing and related industries. It also makes an excellent primary or supplementary text for advanced courses in industrial engineering, management science, operations research, computer science, and artificial intelligence. |
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Page 21
... defined by specific individuals . In a fuzzy logic controller , these parameters are taken as input variables and the values of p . are generated as part of its output . For each input variable , the membership functions are defined in ...
... defined by specific individuals . In a fuzzy logic controller , these parameters are taken as input variables and the values of p . are generated as part of its output . For each input variable , the membership functions are defined in ...
Page 31
... defined by the parents uniformly , whereas directional - BLX has a sampling bias toward a region that parallels the diagonal defined by the parents . There is an assumption that if the population distribution lies along a region that ...
... defined by the parents uniformly , whereas directional - BLX has a sampling bias toward a region that parallels the diagonal defined by the parents . There is an assumption that if the population distribution lies along a region that ...
Page 347
... define the graph G ( k ) = ( V - V , E - E ) , which is a subgraph of graph G with removal of all nodes in V , and all edges incident to V. The reachability matrix R ( k ) for graph G ( k ) is defined as follows : Definition 8.5 ...
... define the graph G ( k ) = ( V - V , E - E ) , which is a subgraph of graph G with removal of all nodes in V , and all edges incident to V. The reachability matrix R ( k ) for graph G ( k ) is defined as follows : Definition 8.5 ...
Contents
Combinatorial Optimization Problems | 53 |
Multiobjective Optimization Problems | 97 |
Fuzzy Optimization Problems | 142 |
Copyright | |
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adaptive applied assigned b₁ beam search calculated cell design chromosome combinatorial optimization computation constraints cost crossover operator decision maker defined denote design problem determine edge evaluation evolutionary example feasible fitness function fitness value follows gene genetic algorithm approach genetic algorithms genetic operators genetic search given go to step graph heuristic ideal point individuals initial population integer programming knapsack problem linear programming m-GA M₁ matrix max_gen membership function minimize minimum spanning tree multiobjective optimization mutation operator node nondominated nonlinear number of machines objective function objective value obtained offspring optimization problems P₁ packet parameters parent Pareto optimal Pareto solutions path permutation pop_size preference procedure process plan production programming problem proposed Prüfer number random number randomly representation roulette wheel selection scheduling problem selection sequence shown in Figure solve spanning tree problem st-GA strategy string techniques topological sort transportation problem variables weight