Introduction to Evolutionary Computation Temi avanzati di Intelligenza Artificiale - Lecture 1
Prof. Vincenzo Cutello
Department of Mathematics and Computer Science University of Catania
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Evolution
What is Evolution ?
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"Disclaimer"
You may whish to treat this as an abstract idea only
It does not matter (in the context of Evolutionary Computation) !
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Darwinian Evolution Four Postulates
1. Individuals within species are variable 2. Some of the variations are passed on to offspring 3. In every generation, more offspring are produced than can survive 4. The survival and reproduction of individuals are not random: The
individuals who survive and go on to reproduce, or who reproduce the most, are those with the most favourable variations. They are naturally selected.
On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection (Darwin 1859)
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Nature of Natural Selection Based on "Evolutionary Analysis (Freeman & Herron, 2001)"
Natural Evolution acts... On Individuals, but the Consequences occur in the population On Individuals, not groups On Phenotypes, but evolution consist of changes in the Genotype On exixting traits, but can produce new traits
Evolution... Is backward looking Is not perfect Is nonrandom Is not progressive
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Why are we Interested ? 'Results' of Evolution are
'Creative', 'Surprising', 'Unexpected' 'Highly adapted' to 'Environmental Niches'
God or Evolution ?
Can a program 'create things like this' ?
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Why are we interested (contd..) ? Unsupervised ! No 'conscious' design No knowledge involved Instead: Reproductive Fitness But ! Natural Evolution had an extremely long time (3.7
Billion Years!) Natural Evolution acts in parallel
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Evolutionary Algorithms Algorithms that are inspired by natural evolution Four Main Elements:
Group of Individuals - Population Source of Variation - Genetic Operators Reproductive Fitness - Fitness Survival of the Fittest - Selection
Search Process Trial and Error Recipe for chosing next trial
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EA Examples 1: Optimization Airfoil Optimization
Other Examples Scheduling Function Optimization Chemical Process Optimization
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EA Examples 2: Exploration Evolutionary Art
Other Examples Electronic Hardware Design Robot Control
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Sex !
Skippers mating, from www.chaparraltree.com/ mn/insects.shtml
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Some Terms from Genetics DNA
Very large linear self-replicating molecules found in all living cells, the physical carrier of Genetic Information (Deoxyribonucleic Acid)
Chromosome A single, very long molecule of DNA
Gene The basic unit of inheritance, (...) a length of DNA which exerts its
influence on an organisms form and function by encoding and directing the synthesis of a protein (...)
Allele One of a number of alternative forms of a gene that can occupy a
given genetic locus on a chromosome.
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Mutation as a Source of Variation Mitosis: Nuclear division in Cells
Mutations: Errors during Mitosis Point Mutations: simple copy errors - create new alleles Duplication: duplicate stretch of DNA - creates extra genetic material others...
Most Mutations are Neutral !
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Sexual Reproduction Additional Steps - Meiosis
Combination of chromosome sets from both parents Additional Division
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Recombination in Sexual Reproduction
Mixing of genetic material Mixing chromosomes Mixing genes on single chromosomes (crossover) Creates new combination of existing alleles
This is why... ...you can inherit your mother's eyes, and your father's nose
Sexual Reproduction Can combine beneficial mutations that arise in different individuals Can elimiate disadvantageous mutations quickly
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Other Aspects of Natural Evolution in EC Punctuated Equilibrium Viruses Co-Evolution Genetic Engineering Non-Mendelian Inheritance Dominant and Recessive Genes
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Course Overview Part 1: Basics
Representations, Selection, Search Operators Part 2: Other Issues
Niching, Co-Evolution, Constraint Handling, Multi-Objective Problems, ...
Part 3: Theory Background Knowledge, Basic Results
Throughout: Tutorials Tutorials, Exercices, Demos
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References and Resouces for this Lecture Books
Hartl, Daniel L. Essential Genetics Jones and Bartlett Publishers, 1996. Introductory genetics text (Barnes Library, q QH 430) (Advanced)
Freeman, Scott and Herron, Jon. C. Evolutionary Analysis 2nd edition, Prentice-Hall 2001. Good book on evolution. (Barnes Library, QH366.2) (Advanced)
Stearns, Steven C and Hoekstra, Rolf. F. Evolution. An Introduction Oxford University Press, 2000. (Barnes Library, QH366.2) (Advanced)
Lawrence, Eleanor Henderson's Dictionary of Biological Terms 10th edn. Longman Scientific and Technical, 1989. For Definitions
Web Resources Introduction to evolutionary Biology (Basic)
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-intro-to-biology.html An Introduction to Genetic Analysis Online Book (Advanced)
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?call=bv.View..ShowTOC&rid=iga.TOC