2010 IEEE Congress on Evolutionary Computation Special Session on:

Niching Methods for Multimodal Optimization

July 18 - 23, 2010, Barcelona, Spain

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Overview

Evolutionary Algorithms (EAs) in their original forms are usually designed for locating a single global solution. These algorithms typically converge to a single solution because of the global selection scheme used. Nevertheless, many real-world problems are “multimodal” by nature, i.e., multiple satisfactory solutions exist. It may be desirable to locate many such satisfactory solutions so that a decision maker can choose one that is most proper in his/her problem domain. Numerous techniques have been developed in the past for locating multiple optima (global or local). These techniques are commonly referred to as “niching” methods. A niching method can be incorporated into a standard EA to promote and maintain formation of multiple stable subpopulations within a single population, with an aim to locate multiple globally optimal or suboptimal solutions. Many niching methods have been developed in the past, including crowding, fitness sharing, derating, restricted tournament selection, clearing, speciation, etc.

Most of existing niching methods, however, have difficulties which need to be overcome before they can be applied successfully to real-world multimodal problems. Some identified issues include: difficulties to pre-specify some niching parameters; difficulties in maintaining found solutions in a run; extra computational overhead; poor scalability when dimensionality is high. This special session aims to highlight the latest developments in niching methods, bring together researchers from academia and industries, and explore future research directions on this topic. We invite authors to submit original and unpublished work on niching methods. Topics of interest include but are not limited to:

  • Theoretical developments in multimodal optimization
  • Niching methods that incurs lower computational costs
  • Handling the issue of niching parameters in niching methods
  • Handling the scalability issue in niching methods
  • Handling problems characterized by massive multi-modality
  • Adaptive or parameter-less niching methods
  • Multiobjective approaches to niching
  • Multimodal optimization in dynamic environments
  • Niching methods applied to discrete multimodal optimization problems
  • Niching methods applied to constrained multimodal optimization problems
  • Niching methods using parallel or distributed computing techniques
  • Benchmarking niching methods, including test problem design and performance metrics
  • Comparative studies of various niching methods
  • Niching methods applied to engineering and other real-world multimodal optimization problems

Please note that we are NOT interested if the adopted task is to find a single solution of a multimodal problem.

Paper Submission:

Manuscripts should be prepared according to the standard format and page limit of regular papers specified in CEC2010 and submitted through the website http://www.wcci2010.org/. Special session papers will be treated in the same way as regular papers and included in the conference proceedings.

Important Dates:

  • Paper Submission: 31 January 2010
  • Decision Notification: 15 March 2010
  • Final Camera-Ready Submission: 2 May 2010

Technical Committee:

  • Jeffrey Horn, Northern Michigan University, USA
  • Gulshan Singh, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA
  • Dipti Srinivasan, National University of Singapore, Singapore
  • Ami Moshaiov, Tel-Aviv University, Israel
  • Qingfu Zhang, University of Essex, UK
  • Andries Engelbrecht, University of Pretoria, South Africa
  • Alessandro Passaro, University of Pisa, Italy
  • Grant Dick, Otago University, New Zealand
  • Liang Jing, Zhengzhou University, China
  • Lona Schoeman, University of Pretoria, South Africa 
  • More to be confirmed ...

Special Session Organizers:

Dr. Xiaodong Li

School of Computer Science and Information Technology

RMIT University

Melbourne, VIC 3001, Australia

Email: xiaodong.li@rmit.edu.au

 

Professor Kalyanmoy Deb

Deva Raj Chair Professor

Department of Mechanical Engineering

Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur

PIN 208016, India

Email: deb@iitk.ac.in

 

Dr. Ofer Shir

Postdoctoral Research Associate

Rabitz Group, Princeton University

Princeton, New Jersey, USA

Email: oshir@Princeton.EDU

 

Associate Professor P. N. Suganthan

School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering

Nanyang Technological University

Singapore, 639798

Email: epnsugan@ntu.edu.sg

 

Dr. Jian-Ping Li

School of Engineering, Design and Technology

Bradford University

Bradford, UK

Email: j.p.li@bradford.ac.uk

 

 

Last updated: 6 October 2009 - Maintained by Xiaodong Li