A many-objective evolutionary algorithm based on decomposition with dynamic resource allocation for irregular optimization
Ming-gang DONG, Bao LIU, Chao JING
A many-objective evolutionary algorithm based on decomposition with dynamic resource allocation for irregular optimization
The multi-objective optimization problem has been encountered in numerous fields such as high-speed train head shape design, overlapping community detection, power dispatch, and unmanned aerial vehicle formation. To address such issues, current approaches focus mainly on problems with regular Pareto front rather than solving the irregular Pareto front. Considering this situation, we propose a many-objective evolutionary algorithm based on decomposition with dynamic resource allocation (MaOEA/D-DRA) for irregular optimization. The proposed algorithm can dynamically allocate computing resources to different search areas according to different shapes of the problem’s Pareto front. An evolutionary population and an external archive are used in the search process, and information extracted from the external archive is used to guide the evolutionary population to different search regions. The evolutionary population evolves with the Tchebycheff approach to decompose a problem into several subproblems, and all the subproblems are optimized in a collaborative manner. The external archive is updated with the method of shift-based density estimation. The proposed algorithm is compared with five state-of-the-art many-objective evolutionary algorithms using a variety of test problems with irregular Pareto front. Experimental results show that the proposed algorithm outperforms these five algorithms with respect to convergence speed and diversity of population members. By comparison with the weighted-sum approach and penalty-based boundary intersection approach, there is an improvement in performance after integration of the Tchebycheff approach into the proposed algorithm.
Many-objective optimization problems / Irregular Pareto front / External archive / Dynamic resource allocation / Shift-based density estimation / Tchebycheff approach
/
〈 | 〉 |