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GECCO
2007
Springer

A new crossover technique for Cartesian genetic programming

14 years 3 months ago
A new crossover technique for Cartesian genetic programming
Genetic Programming was first introduced by Koza using tree representation together with a crossover technique in which random sub-branches of the parents' trees are swapped to create the offspring. Later Miller and Thomson introduced Cartesian Genetic Programming, which uses directed graphs as a representation to replace the tree structures originally introduced by Koza. Cartesian Genetic Programming has been shown to perform better than the traditional Genetic Programming; but it does not use crossover to create offspring, it is implemented using mutation only. In this paper a new crossover method in Genetic Programming is introduced. The new technique is based on an adaptation of the Cartesian Genetic Programming representation and is tested on two simple regression problems. It is shown that by implementing the new crossover technique, convergence is faster than that of using mutation only in the Cartesian Genetic Programming method. Categories and Subject Descriptors I.2.2 [...
Janet Clegg, James Alfred Walker, Julian Francis M
Added 16 Aug 2010
Updated 16 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where GECCO
Authors Janet Clegg, James Alfred Walker, Julian Francis Miller
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