The Troubling Aspects of a Building Block Hypothesis for Genetic Programming
Created by W.Langdon from
gp-bibliography.bib Revision:1.8098
- @TechReport{OReilly:1992:tabbGP,
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author = "U. M. O'Reilly and F. Oppacher",
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title = "The Troubling Aspects of a Building Block Hypothesis
for Genetic Programming",
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institution = "Santa Fe Institute",
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year = "1992",
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type = "Working Paper",
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number = "94-02-001",
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address = "1399 Hyde Park Road Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501-8943
USA
",
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keywords = "genetic algorithms, genetic programming",
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URL = "http://www.santafe.edu/media/workingpapers/94-02-001.pdf",
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size = "12 pages",
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abstract = "n this paper we rigorously formulate the Schema
Theorem for Genetic Programming (GP). This involves
defining a schema, schema order, and defining length
and accounting for the variable length and the
non-homologous nature of GP'S representation. The GP
Schema Theorem and the related notion of a GP Building
Block are used to construct a testable hypothetical
account of how GP searches by hierarchically combining
building blocks. Since building blocks need to have
consistent above average fitness and compactness, and
since the term in the GP Schema Theorem that expresses
compactness is a random variable, the proposed account
of GP search behavior is based on empirically
questionable statistical assumptions. In particular,
low variance in schema fitness is questionable because
the performance of a schema depends in a highly
sensitive manner on the context provided by the
programs in which it is found. GP crossover is likely
to change this context from one generation to the next
which results in high variance in observed schema
fitness. Low variance in compactness seems fortuitous
rather than assured in GP because schema-containing
programs change their sizes essentially at random.",
-
notes = "A version of this paper will be published in
Foundations of Genetic Algorithms (FOGA), See
\cite{OReilly:1995:tabbGP}",
- }
Genetic Programming entries for
Una-May O'Reilly
Franz Oppacher
Citations