Large-scale overlapping problems are prevalent in practical engineering applications, and the optimization challenge is significantly amplified due to the existence of shared variables. Decomposition-based cooperative coevolution (CC) algorithms have demonstrated promising performance in addressing large-scale overlapping problems. However, current CC frameworks designed for overlapping problems rely on grouping methods for the identification of overlapping problem structures and the current grouping methods for large-scale overlapping problems fail to consider both accuracy and efficiency simultaneously. In this article, we propose a two-stage enhanced grouping method for large-scale overlapping problems, called OEDG, which achieves accurate grouping while significantly reducing computational resource consumption. In the first stage, OEDG employs a grouping method based on the finite differences principle to identify all subcomponents and shared variables. In the second stage, we propose two grouping refinement methods, called subcomponent union detection (SUD) and subcomponent detection (SD), to enhance and refine the grouping results. SUD examines the information of the subcomponents and shared variables obtained in the previous stage, and SD corrects inaccurate grouping results. To better verify the performance of the proposed OEDG, we propose a series of novel benchmarks that consider various properties of large-scale overlapping problems, including the topology structure, overlapping degree, and separability. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that OEDG is capable of accurately grouping different types of large-scale overlapping problems while consuming fewer computational resources. Finally, we empirically verify that the proposed OEDG can effectively improve the optimization performance of diverse large-scale overlapping problems.
Cooperative co-evolution (CC) algorithms, based on the divide-and-conquer strategy, have emerged as the predominant approach to solving large-scale global optimization (LSGO) problems. The efficiency and accuracy of the grouping stage significantly impact the performance of the optimization process. While the general separability grouping (GSG) method has overcome the limitation of previous differential grouping (DG) methods by enabling the decomposition of non-additively separable functions, it suffers from high computational complexity. To address this challenge, this article proposes a composite separability grouping (CSG) method, seamlessly integrating DG and GSG into a problem decomposition framework to utilize the strengths of both approaches. CSG introduces a step-by-step decomposition framework that accurately decomposes various problem types using fewer computational resources. By sequentially identifying additively, multiplicatively and generally separable variables, CSG progressively groups non-separable variables by recursively considering the interactions between each non-separable variable and the formed non-separable groups. Furthermore, to enhance the efficiency and accuracy of CSG, we introduce two innovative methods: a multiplicatively separable variable detection method and a non-separable variable grouping method. These two methods are designed to effectively detect multiplicatively separable variables and efficiently group non-separable variables, respectively. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that CSG achieves more accurate variable grouping with lower computational complexity compared to GSG and state-of-the-art DG series designs.
Evolutionary algorithms have been successful in solving multi-objective optimization problems (MOPs). However, as a class of population-based search methodology, evolutionary algorithms require a large number of evaluations of the objective functions, preventing them from being applied to a wide range of expensive MOPs. To tackle the above challenge, this work proposes for the first time a diffusion model that can learn to perform evolutionary multi-objective search, called EmoDM. This is achieved by treating the reversed convergence process of evolutionary search as the forward diffusion and learn the noise distributions from previously solved evolutionary optimization tasks. The pre-trained EmoDM can then generate a set of non-dominated solutions for a new MOP by means of its reverse diffusion without further evolutionary search, thereby significantly reducing the required function evaluations. To enhance the scalability of EmoDM, a mutual entropy-based attention mechanism is introduced to capture the decision variables that are most important for the objectives. Experimental results demonstrate the competitiveness of EmoDM in terms of both the search performance and computational efficiency compared with state-of-the-art evolutionary algorithms in solving MOPs having up to 5000 decision variables. The pre-trained EmoDM is shown to generalize well to unseen problems, revealing its strong potential as a general and efficient MOP solver.
Train timetable rescheduling (TTR) aims to promptly restore the original operation of trains after unexpected disturbances or disruptions. Currently, this work is still done manually by train dispatchers, which is challenging to maintain performance under various problem instances. To mitigate this issue, this study proposes a reinforcement learning-based approach to TTR, which makes the following contributions compared to existing work. First, we design a simple directed graph to represent the TTR problem, enabling the automatic extraction of informative states through graph neural networks. Second, we reformulate the construction process of TTR's solution, not only decoupling the decision model from the problem size but also ensuring the generated scheme's feasibility. Third, we design a learning curriculum for our model to handle the scenarios with different levels of delay. Finally, a simple local search method is proposed to assist the learned decision model, which can significantly improve solution quality with little additional computation cost, further enhancing the practical value of our method. Extensive experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of our method. The learned decision model can achieve better performance for various problems with varying degrees of train delay and different scales when compared to handcrafted rules and state-of-the-art solvers.
With the scaling up of crude oil scheduling in modern refineries, large-scale crude oil scheduling problems (LSCOSPs) emerge with thousands of binary variables and non-linear constraints, which are challenging to be optimized by traditional optimization methods. To solve LSCOSPs, we take the practical crude oil scheduling from a marine-access refinery as an example and start with modeling LSCOSPs from crude unloading, transportation, crude distillation unit processing, and inventory management of intermediate products. On the basis of the proposed model, a dual-stage evolutionary algorithm driven by heuristic rules (denoted by DSEA/HR) is developed, where the dual-stage search mechanism consists of global search and local refinement. In the global search stage, we devise several heuristic rules based on the empirical operating knowledge to generate a well-performing initial population and accelerate convergence in the mixed variables space. In the local refinement stage, a repair strategy is proposed to move the infeasible solutions towards feasible regions by further optimizing the local continuous variables. During the whole evolutionary process, the proposed dual-stage framework plays a crucial role in balancing exploration and exploitation. Experimental results have shown that DSEA/HR outperforms the state-of-the-art and widely-used mathematical programming methods and metaheuristic algorithms on LSCOSP instances within a reasonable time.
In robust optimization problems, the magnitude of perturbations is relatively small. Consequently, solutions within certain regions are less likely to represent the robust optima when perturbations are introduced. Hence, a more efficient search process would benefit from increased opportunities to explore promising regions where global optima or good local optima are situated. In this paper, we introduce a novel robust evolutionary algorithm named the dual-stage robust evolutionary algorithm (DREA) aimed at discovering robust solutions. DREA operates in two stages: the peak-detection stage and the robust solution-searching stage. The primary objective of the peak-detection stage is to identify peaks in the fitness landscape of the original optimization problem. Conversely, the robust solution-searching stage focuses on swiftly identifying the robust optimal solution using information obtained from the peaks discovered in the initial stage. These two stages collectively enable the proposed DREA to efficiently obtain the robust optimal solution for the optimization problem. This approach achieves a balance between solution optimality and robustness by separating the search processes for optimal and robust optimal solutions. Experimental results demonstrate that DREA significantly outperforms five state-of-the-art algorithms across 18 test problems characterized by diverse complexities. Moreover, when evaluated on higher-dimensional robust optimization problems (100-$D$ and 200-$D$), DREA also demonstrates superior performance compared to all five counterpart algorithms.
In this paper, we scale evolutionary algorithms to high-dimensional optimization problems that deceptively possess a low effective dimensionality (certain dimensions do not significantly affect the objective function). To this end, an instantiation of the multiform optimization paradigm is presented, where multiple low-dimensional counterparts of a target high-dimensional task are generated via random embeddings. Since the exact relationship between the auxiliary (low-dimensional) tasks and the target is a priori unknown, a multiform evolutionary algorithm is developed for unifying all formulations into a single multi-task setting. The resultant joint optimization enables the target task to efficiently reuse solutions evolved across various low-dimensional searches via cross-form genetic transfers, hence speeding up overall convergence characteristics. To validate the overall efficacy of our proposed algorithmic framework, comprehensive experimental studies are carried out on well-known continuous benchmark functions as well as a set of practical problems in the hyper-parameter tuning of machine learning models and deep learning models in classification tasks and Predator-Prey games, respectively.
Recent years have witnessed a surge in research on machine learning for combinatorial optimization since learning-based approaches can outperform traditional heuristics and approximate exact solvers at a lower computation cost. However, most existing work on supervised neural combinatorial optimization focuses on TSP instances with a fixed number of cities and requires large amounts of training samples to achieve a good performance, making them less practical to be applied to realistic optimization scenarios. This work aims to develop a data-driven graph representation learning method for solving travelling salesman problems (TSPs) with various numbers of cities. To this end, we propose an edge-aware graph autoencoder (EdgeGAE) model that can learn to solve TSPs after being trained on solution data of various sizes with an imbalanced distribution. We formulate the TSP as a link prediction task on sparse connected graphs. A residual gated encoder is trained to learn latent edge embeddings, followed by an edge-centered decoder to output link predictions in an end-to-end manner. To improve the model's generalization capability of solving large-scale problems, we introduce an active sampling strategy into the training process. In addition, we generate a benchmark dataset containing 50,000 TSP instances with a size from 50 to 500 cities, following an extremely scale-imbalanced distribution, making it ideal for investigating the model's performance for practical applications. We conduct experiments using different amounts of training data with various scales, and the experimental results demonstrate that the proposed data-driven approach achieves a highly competitive performance among state-of-the-art learning-based methods for solving TSPs.
Many real-world optimization problems possess dynamic characteristics. Evolutionary dynamic optimization algorithms (EDOAs) aim to tackle the challenges associated with dynamic optimization problems. Looking at the existing works, the results reported for a given EDOA can sometimes be considerably different. This issue occurs because the source codes of many EDOAs, which are usually very complex algorithms, have not been made publicly available. Indeed, the complexity of components and mechanisms used in many EDOAs makes their re-implementation error-prone. In this paper, to assist researchers in performing experiments and comparing their algorithms against several EDOAs, we develop an open-source MATLAB platform for EDOAs, called Evolutionary Dynamic Optimization LABoratory (EDOLAB). This platform also contains an education module that can be used for educational purposes. In the education module, the user can observe a) a 2-dimensional problem space and how its morphology changes after each environmental change, b) the behaviors of individuals over time, and c) how the EDOA reacts to environmental changes and tries to track the moving optimum. In addition to being useful for research and education purposes, EDOLAB can also be used by practitioners to solve their real-world problems. The current version of EDOLAB includes 25 EDOAs and three fully-parametric benchmark generators. The MATLAB source code for EDOLAB is publicly available and can be accessed from [https://github.com/EDOLAB-platform/EDOLAB-MATLAB].
Cognitive diagnosis plays a vital role in modern intelligent education platforms to reveal students' proficiency in knowledge concepts for subsequent adaptive tasks. However, due to the requirement of high model interpretability, existing manually designed cognitive diagnosis models hold too simple architectures to meet the demand of current intelligent education systems, where the bias of human design also limits the emergence of effective cognitive diagnosis models. In this paper, we propose to automatically design novel cognitive diagnosis models by evolutionary multi-objective neural architecture search (NAS). Specifically, we observe existing models can be represented by a general model handling three given types of inputs and thus first design an expressive search space for the NAS task in cognitive diagnosis. Then, we propose multi-objective genetic programming (MOGP) to explore the NAS task's search space by maximizing model performance and interpretability. In the MOGP design, each architecture is transformed into a tree architecture and encoded by a tree for easy optimization, and a tailored genetic operation based on four sub-genetic operations is devised to generate offspring effectively. Besides, an initialization strategy is also suggested to accelerate the convergence by evolving half of the population from existing models' variants. Experiments on two real-world datasets demonstrate that the cognitive diagnosis models searched by the proposed approach exhibit significantly better performance than existing models and also hold as good interpretability as human-designed models.