Items of some interest:

These are my recent Pin​board​.in links:

  • [1201.5440] Self-​​assembly of anisotropic soft par­ti­cles in two dimensions

    “The self assem­bly of core-​​corona discs inter­act­ing via anisotropic poten­tials is inves­ti­gated using Monte Carlo com­puter sim­u­la­tions. A min­i­mal inter­ac­tion poten­tial that incor­po­rates anisotropy in a sim­ple way is intro­duced. It con­sists in a core-​​corona archi­tec­ture in which the cen­ter of the core is shifted with respect to the cen­ter of the corona. Anisotropy can thus be tuned by pro­gres­sively shift­ing the posi­tion of the core. Despite its sim­plic­ity, the sys­tem self orga­nize in a rich vari­ety of struc­tures includ­ing stripes, tri­an­gu­lar and rec­tan­gu­lar lat­tices, and unusual plas­tic crys­tals. Our results indi­cate that the amount of anisotropy does not alter the lat­tice spac­ing and only influ­ences the type of clus­ter­ing (stripes, micells, etc.) of the indi­vid­ual particles.”

    self-​​assembly biologically-​​inspired sim­u­la­tion pattern-​​formation condensed-​​matter
  • [1201.5477] Entropy-​​growth-​​based model of emo­tion­ally charged online dialogues

    “We ana­lyze emo­tion­ally anno­tated mas­sive data from IRC (Inter­net Relay Chat) and model the dia­logues between its par­tic­i­pants by assum­ing that the dri­ving force for the dis­cus­sion is the entropy growth of emo­tional prob­a­bil­ity dis­tri­b­u­tion. This process is claimed to be cor­re­lated to the emer­gence of the power-​​law dis­tri­b­u­tion of the dis­cus­sion lengths observed in the dia­logues. We per­form numer­i­cal sim­u­la­tions based on the noticed phe­nom­e­non obtain­ing a good agree­ment with the real data. Finally, we pro­pose a method to arti­fi­cially pro­long the dura­tion of the dis­cus­sion that relies on the entropy of emo­tional prob­a­bil­ity distribution.”

    oh-​​look-​​power-​​laws flame-​​wars social-​​dynamics com­plex­ol­ogy cultural-​​dynamics
  • [1201.4955] Coor­di­na­tion, Dif­fer­en­ti­a­tion and Fair­ness in a pop­u­la­tion of coop­er­at­ing agents

    “In a recent paper, we ana­lyzed the self-​​assembly of a com­plex coop­er­a­tion net­work. The net­work was shown to approach a state, where every agent invests the same amount of resources. Nev­er­the­less, highly-​​connected agents arise that extract extra-​​ordinarily high pay­offs while con­tribut­ing com­pa­ra­bly lit­tle to any of their coop­er­a­tions. Here, we inves­ti­gate a vari­ant of the model, in which highly-​​connected agents have access to addi­tional resources. We study ana­lyt­i­cally and numer­i­cally whether these resources are invested in exist­ing col­lab­o­ra­tions, lead­ing to a fairer load dis­tri­b­u­tion, or in estab­lish­ing new col­lab­o­ra­tions, lead­ing to an even less fair dis­tri­b­u­tion of loads and payoffs.”

    col­lab­o­ra­tion social-​​capital agent-​​based network-​​theory com­plex­ol­ogy nudge-​​targets
  • [1201.5426] Con­straint Prop­a­ga­tion as Infor­ma­tion Maximization

    “Dana Scott used the par­tial order among par­tial func­tions for his math­e­mat­i­cal model of recur­sively defined func­tions. He inter­preted the par­tial order as one of infor­ma­tion con­tent. In this paper we elab­o­rate on Scott’s sug­ges­tion of regard­ing com­pu­ta­tion as a process of infor­ma­tion max­i­miza­tion by apply­ing it to the solu­tion of con­straint sat­is­fac­tion prob­lems. Here the method of con­straint prop­a­ga­tion can be inter­preted as decreas­ing uncer­tainty about the solu­tion — that is, as gain in infor­ma­tion about the solu­tion. As illus­tra­tive exam­ple we choose numer­i­cal con­straint sat­is­fac­tion prob­lems to be solved by inter­val con­straints. To facil­i­tate this approach to con­straint solv­ing we for­mu­late con­straint sat­is­fac­tion prob­lems as for­mu­las in pred­i­cate logic. This neces­si­tates extend­ing the usual seman­tics for pred­i­cate logic so that mean­ing is assigned not only to sen­tences but also to for­mu­las with free variables.”

    computer-​​science quite-​​interesting constraint-​​processing computational-​​methods
  • [1201.4459] An effi­cient par­al­lel algo­rithm for the longest path prob­lem in meshes

    “In this paper, first we give a sequen­tial linear-​​time algo­rithm for the longest path prob­lem in meshes. This algo­rithm can be con­sid­ered as an improve­ment of [13]. Then based on this sequen­tial algo­rithm, we present a constant-​​time par­al­lel algo­rithm for the prob­lem which can be run on every par­al­lel machine.”

    algo­rithms graph-​​theory computational-​​complexity nudge-​​targets
  • [1201.4417] Insta­bil­i­ties and Pat­terns in Cou­pled Reaction-​​Diffusion Layers

    “We study insta­bil­i­ties and pat­tern for­ma­tion in reaction-​​diffusion lay­ers that are dif­fu­sively cou­pled. For two-​​layer sys­tems of iden­ti­cal two-​​component reac­tions, we ana­lyze the sta­bil­ity of homo­ge­neous steady states by exploit­ing the block sym­met­ric struc­ture of the lin­ear prob­lem. There are eight pos­si­ble pri­mary bifur­ca­tion sce­nar­ios, includ­ing a Turing-​​Turing bifur­ca­tion that involves two dis­parate length scales whose ratio may be tuned via the inter-​​layer cou­pling. For sys­tems of $n$-component lay­ers and non-​​identical lay­ers, the lin­ear problem’s block form allows approx­i­mate decom­po­si­tion into lower-​​dimensional lin­ear prob­lems if the cou­pling is suf­fi­ciently weak. As an exam­ple, we apply these results to a two-​​layer Brus­se­la­tor sys­tem. The com­pet­ing length scales engi­neered within the lin­ear prob­lem are read­ily appar­ent in numer­i­cal sim­u­la­tions of the full sys­tem. Select­ing a $sqrt{2}$:1 length scale ratio pro­duces an unusual steady square pattern.”

    cute emergent-​​design pattern-​​formation com­plex­ol­ogy nudge-​​targets nonlinear-​​dynamics
  • [1201.4737] Pro­duc­tion Sys­tem Rules as Pro­tein Com­plexes from Genetic Reg­u­la­tory Networks

    “This short paper intro­duces a new way by which to design pro­duc­tion sys­tem rules. An indi­rect encod­ing scheme is pre­sented which views such rules as pro­tein com­plexes pro­duced by the tem­po­ral behav­iour of an arti­fi­cial genetic reg­u­la­tory net­work. This ini­tial study begins by using a sim­ple Boolean reg­u­la­tory net­work to pro­duce tra­di­tional ternary-​​encoded rules before mov­ing to a fuzzy vari­ant to pro­duce real-​​valued rules. Com­pet­i­tive per­for­mance is shown with related genetic reg­u­la­tory net­works and rule-​​based sys­tems on bench­mark problems.”

    evolutionary-​​algorithms production-​​systems computer-​​science emergent-​​design

Items of some interest…

These are my recent Pin​board​.in links:

  • Hebrew Typog­ra­phy

    beau­ti­ful lettering

    typog­ra­phy hebrew graphic-​​design cal­lig­ra­phy let­ter­ing
  • [1110.5376] A Quan­ti­ta­tive Test of Pop­u­la­tion Genet­ics Using Spatio-​​Genetic Pat­terns in Bac­te­r­ial Colonies

    “It is widely accepted that pop­u­la­tion genet­ics the­ory is the cor­ner­stone of evo­lu­tion­ary analy­ses. Empir­i­cal tests of the the­ory, how­ever, are chal­leng­ing because of the com­plex rela­tion­ships between space, dis­per­sal, and evo­lu­tion. Crit­i­cally, we lack quan­ti­ta­tive val­i­da­tion of the spa­tial mod­els of pop­u­la­tion genet­ics. Here we com­bine ana­lyt­ics, on and off-​​lattice sim­u­la­tions, and exper­i­ments with bac­te­ria to per­form quan­ti­ta­tive tests of the the­ory. We study two bac­te­r­ial species, the gut microbe Escherichia coli and the oppor­tunis­tic pathogen Pseudomonas aerug­i­nosa, and show that spatio-​​genetic pat­terns in colony biofilms of both species are accu­rately described by an exten­sion of the one-​​dimensional stepping-​​stone model. We use one empir­i­cal mea­sure, genetic diver­sity at the colony periph­ery, to para­me­ter­ize our mod­els and show that we can then accu­rately pre­dict another key vari­able: the degree of short-​​range cell migra­tion along an edge. More­over, the model allows us to esti­mate other key para­me­ters includ­ing effec­tive pop­u­la­tion size (den­sity) at the expan­sion fron­tier. While our exper­i­men­tal sys­tem is a sim­pli­fi­ca­tion of nat­ural micro­bial com­mu­nity, we argue it is a proof of prin­ci­ple that the spa­tial mod­els of pop­u­la­tion genet­ics can quan­ti­ta­tively cap­ture organ­is­mal evolution.”

    bacterial-​​genetics evo­lu­tion micro­bi­ol­ogy exper­i­ment cute
  • NDFD Data­base Contents

    “You can access NDFD ele­ments via file trans­fer pro­to­col (ftp), http, eXten­si­ble Markup Lan­guage (XML), or web browser. Links to the data, sup­port­ing infor­ma­tion and soft­ware are listed below:…”

    weather data raw-​​data-​​now government2.0 nudge-​​targets ref­er­ence fore­casts
  • The Per­for­ma­tiv­ity of Net­works — Kieran Healy

    “The “per­for­ma­tiv­ity the­sis” is the claim that parts of con­tem­po­rary eco­nom­ics and finance, when car­ried out into the world by pro­fes­sion­als and pop­u­lar­iz­ers, refor­mat and reor­ga­nize the phe­nom­ena they pur­port to describe, in ways that bring the world into line with the­ory. Prac­ti­cal tech­nolo­gies, cal­cu­la­tive devices and portable algo­rithms give actors tools to imple­ment par­tic­u­lar mod­els of action. I argue that social net­work analy­sis is per­for­ma­tive in the same sense as the cases stud­ied in this lit­er­a­ture. Social net­work analy­sis and finance the­ory are sim­i­lar in key aspects of their devel­op­ment and effects. For the case of eco­nom­ics, evi­dence for weaker ver­sions of the per­for­ma­tiv­ity the­sis in quite good, and the strong for­mu­la­tion is cir­cum­stan­tially sup­ported. Net­work the­ory eas­ily meets the evi­den­tial thresh­old for the weaker ver­sions; I offer empir­i­cal exam­ples that sup­port the strong (or “Bar­ne­sian”) for­mu­la­tion. Whether these par­al­lels are a mark in favor of the the­sis or a strike against it is an open ques­tion. I argue that the social net­work tech­nolo­gies and mod­els now being “per­formed” build out sys­tems of gen­er­al­ized reci­procity, con­nec­tiv­ity, and commons-​​based pro­duc­tion. This is in con­trast both to an ear­lier net­work imagery that empha­sized self-​​interest and entre­pre­neur­ial exploita­tion of struc­tural oppor­tu­ni­ties, and to the model of action typ­i­cally con­sid­ered to be per­formed by eco­nomic technologies.”

    network-​​theory network-​​culture eco­nom­ics cultural-​​dynamics theory-​​and-​​practice-​​sitting-​​in-​​a-​​tree

Items of some interest…

These are my recent Pin​board​.in links:

  • [1105.4335] Phys­i­cal approaches to the dynam­ics of genetic cir­cuits: A tutorial

    “Cel­lu­lar behav­ior is gov­erned by gene reg­u­la­tory processes that are intrin­si­cally dynamic and non­lin­ear, and are sub­ject to non-​​negligible amounts of ran­dom fluc­tu­a­tions. Such con­di­tions are ubiq­ui­tous in phys­i­cal sys­tems, where they have been stud­ied for decades using the tools of sta­tis­ti­cal and non­lin­ear physics. The goal of this review is to show how approaches tra­di­tion­ally used in physics can help in reach­ing a systems-​​level under­stand­ing of liv­ing cells. To that end, we present an overview of the dynam­i­cal phe­nom­ena exhib­ited by genetic cir­cuits and their func­tional sig­nif­i­cance. We also describe the the­o­ret­i­cal and exper­i­men­tal approaches that are being used to unravel the rela­tion­ship between cir­cuit struc­ture and func­tion in dynam­i­cal cel­lu­lar processes under the influ­ence of noise, both at the single-​​cell level and in cel­lu­lar pop­u­la­tions, where inter­cel­lu­lar cou­pling plays an impor­tant role.”

    systems-​​biology biological-​​engineering genetic-​​regulatory-​​networks emergent-​​design bio­chem­istry overview
  • [1106.0371] A Novel Image Seg­men­ta­tion Enhance­ment Tech­nique based on Active Con­tour and Topo­log­i­cal Alignments

    “Topo­log­i­cal align­ments and snakes are used in image pro­cess­ing, par­tic­u­larly in locat­ing object bound­aries. Both of them have their own advan­tages and lim­i­ta­tions. To improve the over­all image bound­ary detec­tion sys­tem, we focused on devel­op­ing a novel algo­rithm for image pro­cess­ing. The algo­rithm we pro­pose to develop will based on the active con­tour method in con­junc­tion with topo­log­i­cal align­ments method to enhance the image detec­tion approach. The algo­rithm presents novel tech­nique to incor­po­rate the advan­tages of both Topo­log­i­cal Align­ments and snakes. Where the ini­tial seg­men­ta­tion by Topo­log­i­cal Align­ments is firstly trans­formed into the input of the snake model and begins its evolve­ment to the inter­ested object bound­ary. The results show that the algo­rithm can deal with low con­trast images and shape cells, demon­strate the seg­men­ta­tion accu­racy under weak image bound­aries, which respon­si­ble for lack­ing accu­racy in image detect­ing tech­niques. We have achieved bet­ter seg­men­ta­tion and bound­ary detect­ing for the image, also the abil­ity of the sys­tem to improve the low con­trast and deal with over and under segmentation.”

    image-​​segmentation algo­rithms nudge-​​targets
  • [1106.2508] A Prac­ti­cal Imple­men­ta­tion of the Bernoulli Factory

    “…While sev­eral prac­ti­cal uses of the method have been pro­posed in Monte Carlo appli­ca­tions, these require an imple­men­ta­tion frame­work that is flex­i­ble, gen­eral and effi­cient. We present such a frame­work for func­tions that are either strictly lin­ear, con­cave, or con­vex on the unit inter­val using a series of enve­lope func­tions defined through a cas­cade, and show that this method not only greatly reduces the num­ber of input bits needed in prac­tice com­pared to other cur­rently pro­posed solu­tions for more spe­cific prob­lems, but can eas­ily be cou­pled to more asymp­tot­i­cally effi­cient meth­ods to allow for the­o­ret­i­cally strong results.”

    algo­rithms numerical-​​methods Monte-​​Carlo-​​simulation probability-​​theory nudge-​​targets
  • [1105.1729] Evo­lu­tion­ary search for novel super­hard materials

    “We have devel­oped a method for pre­dic­tion of the hard­est crys­tal struc­tures in a given chem­i­cal sys­tem. It is based on the evo­lu­tion­ary algo­rithm USPEX and electronegativity-​​based hard­ness model that we have aug­mented with bond-​​valence model and graph the­ory. These exten­sions enable cor­rect descrip­tion of the hard­ness of lay­ered, mol­e­c­u­lar and low-​​symmetry crys­tal struc­tures. Apply­ing this method to C and TiO2, we have (i) obtained a num­ber of low-​​energy car­bon struc­tures with hard­ness slightly lower than dia­mond and (ii) proved that TiO2 in any of its pos­si­ble poly­morphs can­not be the hard­est oxide, its hard­ness being below 17 GPa.”

    materials-​​science genetic-​​algorithm condensed-​​matter sim­u­la­tion nudge-​​targets
  • [1109.0573] Phase Retrieval via Matrix Completion

    “This paper con­sid­ers the fun­da­men­tal prob­lem of recov­er­ing a gen­eral sig­nal, an image for exam­ple, from the mag­ni­tude of its Fourier trans­form. This prob­lem, also known as phase retrieval, arises in many appli­ca­tions and has chal­lenged engi­neers, physi­cists, and math­e­mati­cians for decades. Its ori­gin comes from the fact that detec­tors can often times only record the squared mod­u­lus of the Fres­nel or Fraun­hofer dif­frac­tion pat­tern of the radi­a­tion that is scat­tered from an object. In such set­tings, one can­not mea­sure the phase of the opti­cal wave reach­ing the detec­tor and, there­fore, much infor­ma­tion about the scat­tered object or the opti­cal field is lost since, as is well known, the phase encodes a lot of the struc­tural con­tent of the image we wish to form.”

    image-​​processing inverse-​​problems signal-​​processing system-​​identification frequency-​​space algo­rithms nudge-​​targets numerical-​​methods
  • [1109.0807] Har­monic Analy­sis of Boolean Net­works: Deter­mi­na­tive Power and Perturbations

    “Con­sider a large Boolean net­work with a feed for­ward struc­ture. Given a prob­a­bil­ity dis­tri­b­u­tion for the inputs, can one find-​​possibly small-​​collections of input nodes that deter­mine the states of most other nodes in the network?…”

    Boolean-​​networks Kauff­ma­nia com­plex­ol­ogy discrete-​​mathematics mathematical-​​recreations nudge-​​targets
  • [0801.0830] Evo­lu­tion of cen­tral pat­tern gen­er­a­tors for the con­trol of a five-​​link bipedal walk­ing mechanism

    “With the aim of pro­duc­ing a sta­ble human-​​like bipedal gait, a five-​​link pla­nar walk­ing mech­a­nism is cou­pled with a cen­tral pat­tern gen­er­a­tor (CPG) neural net­work, con­sist­ing of units based on Matsuoka’s half-​​center oscil­la­tor model with a firm basis in neu­ro­phys­i­ol­ogy. As a min­i­mal­is­tic approach to bipedal walk­ing, this type of walk­ing mech­a­nism con­tains only four actu­a­tors, and is lack­ing feet and ankles. The mech­a­nism is sim­u­lated with accu­rate physics, allow­ing real­is­tic fit­ness eval­u­a­tions for the cre­ation of CPG con­trollers through evo­lu­tion­ary com­pu­ta­tion. The oscil­la­tory para­me­ters, inter­nal con­nec­tiv­ity struc­ture, and exter­nal feed­back path­ways of the net­works are deter­mined through genetic algo­rithms (GA) opti­miza­tion. The evolved CPG net­works are trans­ferred to a hard­ware imple­men­ta­tion of the mech­a­nism, to test their per­for­mance under real-​​world dynam­ics. Results con­firm that the bio­log­i­cally inspired CPG model is very well suited for con­trol­ling legged loco­mo­tion, since a diverse man­i­fes­ta­tion of CPG net­works (with and with­out exter­nal feed­back) have been observed to suc­ceed dur­ing the course of GA eval­u­a­tions. Obser­va­tions also imply that while the CPG mech­a­nism is inher­ently able to sus­tain a sta­ble gait, the uti­liza­tion of feed­back path­ways makes the gait more human-​​like and is needed to pro­vide a means to adapt to irreg­u­lar­i­ties in the environment.”

    robot­ics engineering-​​design genetic-​​algorithm neural-​​networks cyber­net­ics nudge-​​targets
  • [1109.3351] Phys­i­cal lim­its on coop­er­a­tive protein-​​DNA bind­ing and the kinet­ics of com­bi­na­to­r­ial tran­scrip­tion regulation

    “Much of the com­plex­ity observed in gene reg­u­la­tion orig­i­nates from coop­er­a­tive protein-​​DNA bind­ing. While stud­ies of the tar­get search of pro­teins for their spe­cific bind­ing sites on the DNA have revealed design prin­ci­ples for the quan­ti­ta­tive char­ac­ter­is­tics of protein-​​DNA inter­ac­tions, no such prin­ci­ples are known for the coop­er­a­tive inter­ac­tions between DNA-​​binding pro­teins. We con­sider a sim­ple the­o­ret­i­cal model for two inter­act­ing tran­scrip­tion fac­tor (TF) species, search­ing for and bind­ing to two adja­cent tar­get sites hid­den in the genomic back­ground. We study the kinetic com­pe­ti­tion of a dimer search path­way and a monomer search path­way, as well as the steady-​​state reg­u­la­tion func­tion medi­ated by the two TFs over a broad range of TF-​​TF inter­ac­tion strengths. Using a tran­scrip­tional AND-​​logic as exem­plary func­tional con­text, we iden­tify the func­tion­ally desir­able regime for the inter­ac­tion. We find that both weak and very strong TF-​​TF inter­ac­tions are favor­able, albeit with dif­fer­ent char­ac­ter­is­tics. How­ever, there is also an unfa­vor­able regime of inter­me­di­ate inter­ac­tions where the genetic response is pro­hib­i­tively slow.”

    biological-​​engineering genetic-​​regularory-​​networks systems-​​biology emergent-​​design nudge-​​targets
  • [1109.6874] #h00t: Cen­sor­ship Resis­tant Microblogging

    “Microblog­ging ser­vices such as Twit­ter are an increas­ingly impor­tant way to com­mu­ni­cate, both for indi­vid­u­als and for groups through the use of hash­tags that denote top­ics of con­ver­sa­tion. How­ever, groups can be eas­ily blocked from com­mu­ni­cat­ing through block­ing of posts with the given hash­tags. We pro­pose #h00t, a sys­tem for cen­sor­ship resis­tant microblog­ging. #h00t presents an inter­face that is much like Twit­ter, except that hash­tags are replaced with very short hashes (e.g., 24 bits) of the group iden­ti­fier. Nat­u­rally, with such short hashes, hash­tags from dif­fer­ent groups may col­lide and #h00t users will actu­ally seek to cre­ate col­li­sions. By encrypt­ing all posts with keys derived from the group iden­ti­fiers, #h00t client soft­ware can fil­ter out other groups’ posts while mak­ing such fil­ter­ing dif­fi­cult for the adver­sary. In essence, by lever­ag­ing col­li­sions, groups can tun­nel their posts in other groups’ posts. A cen­sor could not block a given group with­out also block­ing the other groups with col­lid­ing hash­tags. We eval­u­ate the fea­si­bil­ity of #h00t through traces col­lected from Twit­ter, show­ing that a sin­gle mod­ern com­puter has enough com­pu­ta­tional through­put to encrypt every tweet sent through Twit­ter in real time. We also use these traces to ana­lyze the band­width and anonymity trade­offs that would come with dif­fer­ent vari­a­tions on how group iden­ti­fiers are encoded and hash­tags are selected to pur­pose­fully col­lide with one another.”

    social-​​media steganog­ra­phy robust­ness activism cute
  • [1107.0414] A ran­dom walk on image patches

    “In this paper we address the prob­lem of under­stand­ing the suc­cess of algo­rithms that orga­nize patches accord­ing to graph-​​based met­rics. Algo­rithms that ana­lyze patches extracted from images or time series have led to state-​​of-​​the art tech­niques for clas­si­fi­ca­tion, denois­ing, and the study of non­lin­ear dynam­ics. The main con­tri­bu­tion of this work is to pro­vide a the­o­ret­i­cal expla­na­tion for the above exper­i­men­tal obser­va­tions. Our approach relies on a detailed analy­sis of the com­mute time met­ric on pro­to­typ­i­cal graph mod­els that epit­o­mize the geom­e­try observed in gen­eral patch graphs.…”

    image-​​segmentation image-​​analysis algo­rithms com­bi­na­torics nudge-​​targets
  • [1107.0385] An algo­rithm for autonomously plot­ting solu­tion sets in the pres­ence of turn­ing points

    “Plot­ting solu­tion sets for par­tic­u­lar equa­tions may be com­pli­cated by the exis­tence of turn­ing points. Here we describe an algo­rithm which not only over­comes such prob­lem­atic points, but does so in the most gen­eral of set­tings. Appli­ca­tions of the algo­rithm are high­lighted through two exam­ples: the first pro­vides ver­i­fi­ca­tion, while the sec­ond demon­strates a non-​​trivial appli­ca­tion. The lat­ter is fol­lowed by a thor­ough run-​​time analy­sis. While both exam­ples deal with bivari­ate equa­tions, it is dis­cussed how the algo­rithm may be gen­er­al­ized for space curves in $R^{3}$.”

    visu­al­iza­tion math­e­mat­ics graph­ics approx­i­ma­tion algo­rithms nudge-​​targets
  • [1105.1033] Adap­tively Learn­ing the Crowd Kernel

    “We intro­duce an algo­rithm that, given n objects, learns a sim­i­lar­ity matrix over all n^2 pairs, from crowd­sourced data alone. The algo­rithm sam­ples responses to adap­tively cho­sen triplet-​​based relative-​​similarity queries. Each query has the form “is object ‘a’ more sim­i­lar to ‘b’ or to ‘c’?” and is cho­sen to be max­i­mally infor­ma­tive given the pre­ced­ing responses. The out­put is an embed­ding of the objects into Euclid­ean space (like MDS); we refer to this as the “crowd ker­nel.” SVMs reveal that the crowd ker­nel cap­tures promi­nent and sub­tle fea­tures across a num­ber of domains, such as “is striped” among neck­ties and “vowel vs. con­so­nant” among letters.”

    clas­si­fi­ca­tion ontology-​​discovery crowd­sourc­ing feature-​​extraction algo­rithms nudge-​​targets performance-​​space-​​analysis
  • [1109.1030] An Algo­rithm for Detect­ing Intrin­si­cally Knot­ted Graphs

    “We describe an algo­rithm that rec­og­nizes some (per­haps all) intrin­si­cally knot­ted (IK) graphs, and can help find knot­less embed­dings for graphs that are not IK. The algo­rithm, imple­mented as a Math­e­mat­ica pro­gram, has already been used by Gold­berg, Mattman, and Naimi [6] to greatly expand the list of known minor min­i­mal IK graphs, and to find knot­less embed­dings for some graphs that had pre­vi­ously resisted attempts to clas­sify them as IK or non-​​IK.”

    com­bi­na­torics topol­ogy algo­rithms nudge-​​targets
  • [1109.5635] Approx­i­mat­ing Edit Dis­tance in Near-​​Linear Time

    “We show how to com­pute the edit dis­tance between two strings of length n up to a fac­tor of 2^{~O(sqrt(log n))} in n^(1+o(1)) time. This is the first sub-​​polynomial approx­i­ma­tion algo­rithm for this prob­lem that runs in near-​​linear time, improv­ing on the state-​​of-​​the-​​art n^(1/3+o(1)) approx­i­ma­tion. Pre­vi­ously, approx­i­ma­tion of 2^{~O(sqrt(log n))} was known only for embed­ding edit dis­tance into l_​1, and it is not known if that embed­ding can be com­puted in less than qua­dratic time.”

    algo­rithms string-​​editing Levenshtein-​​distance rewriting-​​systems bioin­for­mat­ics nudge-​​targets
  • [1107.1866] Priority-​​based task reas­sign­ments in hier­ar­chi­cal 2D mesh-​​connected sys­tems using tableaux

    “Task reas­sign­ments in 2D mesh-​​connected sys­tems (2D-​​MSs) have been researched and sim­u­lated for sev­eral decades. We pro­pose a hier­ar­chi­cal 2D mesh-​​connected sys­tem (2D-​​HMS) in order to exploit the reg­u­lar nature of a 2D-​​MS. In our approach priority-​​based task assign­ments and reas­sign­ments in a 2D-​​HMS are rep­re­sented by tableaux and their algo­rithms. We pro­vide exam­ples of priority-​​based task reas­sign­ments in a 2D-​​HMS in which task relo­ca­tions are sim­ply reduced to a jeu de taquin slide.”

    sched­ul­ing operations-​​research algo­rithms grid-​​computing opti­miza­tion nudge-​​targets
  • [1101.4744] Clus­ter­ing func­tional data using wavelets

    “We present two meth­ods for detect­ing pat­terns and clus­ters in high dimen­sional time-​​dependent func­tional data. Our meth­ods are based on wavelet-​​based sim­i­lar­ity mea­sures, since wavelets are well suited for iden­ti­fy­ing highly dis­crim­i­nant local time and scale fea­tures. The mul­tires­o­lu­tion aspect of the wavelet trans­form pro­vides a time-​​scale decom­po­si­tion of the sig­nals allow­ing to visu­al­ize and to clus­ter the func­tional data into homo­ge­neous groups. For each input func­tion, through its empir­i­cal orthog­o­nal wavelet trans­form the first method uses the dis­tri­b­u­tion of energy across scales gen­er­ate a handy num­ber of fea­tures that can be suf­fi­cient to still make the sig­nals well dis­tin­guish­able. Our new sim­i­lar­ity mea­sure com­bined with an effi­cient fea­ture selec­tion tech­nique in the wavelet domain is then used within more or less clas­si­cal clus­ter­ing algo­rithms to effec­tively dif­fer­en­ti­ate among high dimen­sional pop­u­la­tions. The sec­ond method uses dis­sim­i­lar­ity mea­sures between the whole time-​​scale rep­re­sen­ta­tions and are based on wavelet-​​coherence tools. The clus­ter­ing is then per­formed using a k-​​centroid algo­rithm start­ing from these dis­sim­i­lar­i­ties. Prac­ti­cal per­for­mance of these meth­ods that jointly designs both the fea­ture selec­tion in the wavelet domain and the clas­si­fi­ca­tion dis­tance is demon­strated through sim­u­la­tions as well as daily pro­files of the French elec­tric­ity power demand.”

    clas­si­fi­ca­tion time-​​series feature-​​extraction machine-​​learning multiobjective-​​optimization ontology-​​discovery wavelets nudge-​​targets
  • [1105.3726] Con­trol­ling Com­plex Net­works with Com­pen­satory Perturbations

    “The response of com­plex net­works to per­tur­ba­tions is of utmost impor­tance in areas as diverse as ecosys­tem man­age­ment, emer­gency response, and cell repro­gram­ming. A fun­da­men­tal prop­erty of net­works is that the per­tur­ba­tion of one node can affect other nodes, in a process that may cause the entire or sub­stan­tial part of the sys­tem to change behav­ior and pos­si­bly col­lapse. Recent research in meta­bolic and food-​​web net­works has demon­strated the con­cept that net­work dam­age caused by exter­nal per­tur­ba­tions can often be mit­i­gated or reversed by the appli­ca­tion of com­pen­satory per­tur­ba­tions. Com­pen­satory per­tur­ba­tions are con­strained to be phys­i­cally admis­si­ble and amenable to imple­men­ta­tion on the net­work. How­ever, the sys­tem­atic iden­ti­fi­ca­tion of com­pen­satory per­tur­ba­tions that con­form to these con­straints remains an open prob­lem. Here, we present a method to con­struct com­pen­satory per­tur­ba­tions that can con­trol the fate of gen­eral net­works under such con­straints. Our approach accounts for the full non­lin­ear behav­ior of real com­plex net­works and can bring the sys­tem to a desir­able tar­get state even when this state is not directly acces­si­ble. Appli­ca­tions to genetic net­works show that com­pen­satory per­tur­ba­tions are effec­tive even when lim­ited to a small frac­tion of all nodes in the net­work and that they are far more effec­tive when lim­ited to the highest-​​degree nodes. The approach is con­cep­tu­ally sim­ple and com­pu­ta­tion­ally effi­cient, mak­ing it suit­able for the res­cue, con­trol, and repro­gram­ming of large com­plex net­works in var­i­ous domains.”

    emergent-​​design com­plex­ol­ogy con­trol biological-​​engineering nudge-​​targets
  • [1109.1275] A For­mal Ver­i­fi­ca­tion Approach to the Design of Syn­thetic Gene Networks

    “The design of genetic net­works with spe­cific func­tions is one of the major goals of syn­thetic biol­ogy. How­ever, con­struct­ing bio­log­i­cal devices that work “as required” remains chal­leng­ing, while the cost of uncov­er­ing flawed designs exper­i­men­tally is large. To address this issue, we pro­pose a fully auto­mated frame­work that allows the cor­rect­ness of syn­thetic gene net­works to be for­mally ver­i­fied in sil­ico from rich, high level func­tional spec­i­fi­ca­tions. Given a device, we auto­mat­i­cally con­struct a math­e­mat­i­cal model from exper­i­men­tal data char­ac­ter­iz­ing the parts it is com­posed of. The spe­cific model struc­ture guar­an­tees that all exper­i­men­tal obser­va­tions are cap­tured and allows us to con­struct finite abstrac­tions through poly­he­dral oper­a­tions. The cor­rect­ness of the model with respect to tem­po­ral logic spec­i­fi­ca­tions can then be ver­i­fied auto­mat­i­cally using meth­ods inspired by model check­ing. Over­all, our pro­ce­dure is con­ser­v­a­tive but it can fil­ter through a large num­ber of poten­tial device designs and select few that sat­isfy the spec­i­fi­ca­tion to be imple­mented and tested fur­ther exper­i­men­tally. Illus­tra­tive exam­ples of the appli­ca­tion of our meth­ods to the design of sim­ple syn­thetic gene net­works are included.”

    genetic-​​regulatory-​​networks bioin­for­mat­ics biological-​​engineering design-​​automation emergent-​​design acceptance-​​testing performance-​​measure nudge
  • [1108.1150] Epis­ta­sis can lead to frag­mented neu­tral spaces and con­tin­gency in evolution

    “Under neu­tral rec­i­p­ro­cal sign epis­ta­sis, two genetic changes are jointly neu­tral, even though their indi­vid­ual effects are dele­te­ri­ous. By using the widely stud­ied map­ping from an RNA sequence to sec­ondary struc­ture, we inves­ti­gate the effect of this kind of epis­ta­sis on neu­tral spaces cor­re­spond­ing to net­works of geno­types that fold to the same sec­ondary struc­ture. Neu­tral net­works for RNA struc­tures with n bonds are typ­i­cally frag­mented into at least 2n dif­fer­ent neu­tral com­po­nents that can­not be con­nected by sin­gle point muta­tions. By exhaus­tive enu­mer­a­tion of all RNA sec­ondary struc­tures of sequences of length 15 we show that most net­works are not dom­i­nated by one neu­tral com­po­nent, but are rather bro­ken up into mul­ti­ple large com­po­nents. Although they gen­er­ate the same phe­no­type, com­po­nents of a sin­gle neu­tral net­work are het­ero­ge­neous, show­ing wide vari­a­tions in their robust­ness and their evolv­abil­ity. Both prop­er­ties are cor­re­lated with com­po­nent size, rather than with the size of their under­ly­ing neu­tral net­work. In par­tic­u­lar, sets of acces­si­ble phe­no­types can vary quite strongly between com­po­nents. Thus, the poten­tial for future inno­va­tion is con­tin­gent on which neu­tral com­po­nent a pop­u­la­tion occu­pies. We fur­ther argue that neu­tral rec­i­p­ro­cal sign epis­ta­sis may have sim­i­lar con­se­quences for neu­tral evo­lu­tion of other bio­log­i­cal sys­tems as well.”

    com­bi­na­torics RNA neutral-​​networks com­plex­ol­ogy bioin­for­mat­ics polymer-​​models mathematical-​​recreations nudge-​​targets
  • Old​Fonts​.com | About Us

    “Will­son founded 3IP in 1989 to self-​​publish a book of pre­ten­tious nature essays. Soon after, he found him­self tin­ker­ing with type design, and 3IP has since become known for its library of authentic-​​looking hand­writ­ing fonts—many of them mod­eled after his­tor­i­cal penmanship—and antique text simulations.”

    typog­ra­phy fonts hand­writ­ing
  • Col­lec­tive Wis­dom — Crooked Timber

    “More broadly, a sim­ple dic­tum such as ‘lis­ten to the experts’ isn’t going to work, pre­cisely because our most pow­er­ful meth­ods of gen­er­at­ing new knowl­edge (viz. the sci­ences) are not so much based on lis­ten­ing to indi­vid­ual experts, as on includ­ing these experts (and many oth­ers) in broader social sys­tems which expose them con­tin­u­ally to the ideas of oth­ers and vice-​​versa. Design­ing (or – per­haps bet­ter– nur­tur­ing) such sys­tems is hard to think about and hard to do – but it has to be the way forward.”

    via:arsyed wisdom-​​of-​​crowds com­plex­ol­ogy inno­va­tion cultural-​​assumptions cre­den­tial­ing problem-​​solving what-​​is-​​true-​​is-​​what-​​gets-​​said
  • [1109.1146] A Dis­trib­uted Mincut/​Maxflow Algo­rithm Com­bin­ing Path Aug­men­ta­tion and Push-​​Relabel

    “We develop a novel dis­trib­uted algo­rithm for the min­i­mum cut prob­lem. We pri­mar­ily aim at solv­ing large sparse prob­lems. Assum­ing ver­tices of the graph are par­ti­tioned into sev­eral regions, the algo­rithm per­forms path aug­men­ta­tions inside the regions and updates of the push-​​relabel style between the regions. The inter­ac­tion between regions is con­sid­ered expen­sive (regions are loaded into the mem­ory one-​​by-​​one or located on sep­a­rate machines in a net­work). The algo­rithm works in sweeps — passes over all regions. Let $B$ be the set of ver­tices inci­dent to inter-​​region edges of the graph. We present a sequen­tial and par­al­lel ver­sions of the algo­rithm which ter­mi­nate in at most $2|B|^2+1$ sweeps. The com­pet­ing algo­rithm by Delong and Boykov uses push-​​relabel updates inside regions. In the case of a fixed par­ti­tion we prove that this algo­rithm has a tight $O(n^2)$ bound on the num­ber of sweeps, where $n$ is the num­ber of ver­tices. We tested sequen­tial ver­sions of the algo­rithms on instances of maxflow prob­lems in com­puter vision. Exper­i­men­tally, the num­ber of sweeps required by the new algo­rithm is much lower than for the Delong and Boykov’s vari­ant. Large prob­lems (up to $108$ ver­tices and $6cdot 108$ edges) are solved using under 1GB of mem­ory in about 10 sweeps.”

    algo­rithms operations-​​research nudge-​​targets
  • [1105.4953] A fast near­est neigh­bor search algo­rithm based on vec­tor quantization

    “In this arti­cle, we pro­pose a new fast near­est neigh­bor search algo­rithm, based on vec­tor quan­ti­za­tion. Like many other branch and bound search algo­rithms [1,10], a pre­pro­cess­ing recur­sively par­ti­tions the data set into dis­jointed sub­sets until the num­ber of points in each part is small enough. In doing so, a search-​​tree data struc­ture is built. This pre­lim­i­nary recur­sive data-​​set par­ti­tion is based on the vec­tor quan­ti­za­tion of the empir­i­cal dis­tri­b­u­tion of the ini­tial data-​​set. Unlike pre­vi­ously cited meth­ods, this kind of par­ti­tions does not a pri­ori allow to elim­i­nate sev­eral brother nodes in the search tree with a sin­gle test. To over­come this dif­fi­culty, we pro­pose an algo­rithm to reduce the num­ber of tested brother nodes to a min­i­mal list that we call “friend Voronoi cells”. The com­plete descrip­tion of the method requires a deeper insight into the prop­er­ties of Delau­nay tri­an­gu­la­tions and Voronoi diagrams”

    algo­rithms search-​​algorithms data-​​analysis nudge-​​targets
  • [1108.0986] A prox­i­mal point algo­rithm for sequen­tial fea­ture extrac­tion applications

    “We pro­pose a prox­i­mal point algo­rithm to solve LAROS prob­lem, that is the prob­lem of find­ing a “large approx­i­mately rank-​​one sub­ma­trix”. This LAROS prob­lem is used to sequen­tially extract fea­tures in data. We also develop a new stop­ping cri­te­rion for the prox­i­mal point algo­rithm, which is based on the dual­ity con­di­tions of eps-​​optimal solu­tions of the LAROS prob­lem, with a the­o­ret­i­cal guar­an­tee. We test our algo­rithm with two image data­bases and show that we can use the LAROS prob­lem to extract appro­pri­ate com­mon fea­tures from these images.”

    algo­rithms image-​​segmentation feature-​​extraction nudge-​​targets
  • [1011.2348] Ergodic Con­trol and Poly­he­dral approaches to PageR­ank Optimization

    “We study a gen­eral class of PageR­ank opti­miza­tion prob­lems which con­sist in find­ing an opti­mal out­link strat­egy for a web site sub­ject to design con­straints. We con­sider both a con­tin­u­ous prob­lem, in which one can choose the inten­sity of a link, and a dis­crete one, in which in each page, there are oblig­a­tory links, fac­ul­ta­tive links and for­bid­den links. We show that the con­tin­u­ous prob­lem, as well as its dis­crete vari­ant when there are no con­straints cou­pling dif­fer­ent pages, can both be mod­eled by con­strained Markov deci­sion processes with ergodic reward, in which the web­mas­ter deter­mines the tran­si­tion prob­a­bil­i­ties of web­surfers. Although the num­ber of actions turns out to be expo­nen­tial, we show that an asso­ci­ated poly­tope of tran­si­tion mea­sures has a con­cise rep­re­sen­ta­tion, from which we deduce that the con­tin­u­ous prob­lem is solv­able in poly­no­mial time, and that the same is true for the dis­crete prob­lem when there are no cou­pling con­straints. We also pro­vide effi­cient algo­rithms, adapted to very large net­works. Then, we inves­ti­gate the qual­i­ta­tive fea­tures of opti­mal out­link strate­gies, and iden­tify in par­tic­u­lar assump­tions under which there exists a “mas­ter” page to which all con­trolled pages should point. We report numer­i­cal results on frag­ments of the real web graph.”

    opti­miza­tion PageR­ank operations-​​research algo­rithms nudge-​​targets

Items of some interest…

These are my recent Pin​board​.in links:

  • [1106.1796] Accel­er­at­ing Rein­force­ment Learn­ing by Com­pos­ing Solu­tions of Auto­mat­i­cally Iden­ti­fied Subtasks

    “This paper dis­cusses a sys­tem that accel­er­ates rein­force­ment learn­ing by using trans­fer from related tasks. With­out such trans­fer, even if two tasks are very sim­i­lar at some abstract level, an exten­sive re-​​learning effort is required. The sys­tem achieves much of its power by trans­fer­ring parts of pre­vi­ously learned solu­tions rather than a sin­gle com­plete solu­tion. The sys­tem exploits strong fea­tures in the multi-​​dimensional func­tion pro­duced by rein­force­ment learn­ing in solv­ing a par­tic­u­lar task. These fea­tures are sta­ble and easy to rec­og­nize early in the learn­ing process. They gen­er­ate a par­ti­tion­ing of the state space and thus the func­tion. The par­ti­tion is rep­re­sented as a graph. This is used to index and com­pose func­tions stored in a case base to form a close approx­i­ma­tion to the solu­tion of the new task. Exper­i­ments demon­strate that func­tion com­po­si­tion often pro­duces more than an order of mag­ni­tude increase in learn­ing rate com­pared to a basic rein­force­ment learn­ing algorithm.”

    algo­rithms learn­ing problem-​​solving decom­po­si­tion spec­i­fi­ca­tion nudge-​​targets
  • [1105.5447] Adap­tive Par­al­lel Iter­a­tive Deep­en­ing Search

    “Many of the arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence tech­niques devel­oped to date rely on heuris­tic search through large spaces. Unfor­tu­nately, the size of these spaces and the cor­re­spond­ing com­pu­ta­tional effort reduce the applic­a­bil­ity of oth­er­wise novel and effec­tive algo­rithms. A num­ber of par­al­lel and dis­trib­uted approaches to search have con­sid­er­ably improved the per­for­mance of the search process. Our goal is to develop an archi­tec­ture that auto­mat­i­cally selects par­al­lel search strate­gies for opti­mal per­for­mance on a vari­ety of search prob­lems. In this paper we describe one such archi­tec­ture real­ized in the Eureka sys­tem, which com­bines the ben­e­fits of many dif­fer­ent approaches to par­al­lel heuris­tic search. Through empir­i­cal and the­o­ret­i­cal analy­ses we observe that fea­tures of the prob­lem space directly affect the choice of opti­mal par­al­lel search strat­egy. We then employ machine learn­ing tech­niques to select the opti­mal par­al­lel search strat­egy for a given prob­lem space. When a new search task is input to the sys­tem, Eureka uses fea­tures describ­ing the search space and the cho­sen archi­tec­ture to auto­mat­i­cally select the appro­pri­ate search strat­egy. Eureka has been tested on a MIMD par­al­lel proces­sor, a dis­trib­uted net­work of work­sta­tions, and a sin­gle work­sta­tion using mul­ti­thread­ing. Results gen­er­ated from fif­teen puz­zle prob­lems, robot arm motion prob­lems, arti­fi­cial search spaces, and plan­ning prob­lems indi­cate that Eureka out­per­forms any of the tested strate­gies used exclu­sively for all prob­lem instances and is able to greatly reduce the search time for these applications.”

    algo­rithms search-​​algorithms opti­miza­tion artificial-​​intelligence par­al­lelism performance-​​measure nudge-​​targets
  • [1106.4064] Algo­rith­mic Pro­gram­ming Lan­guage Identification

    “Moti­vated by the amount of code that goes uniden­ti­fied on the web, we intro­duce a prac­ti­cal method for algo­rith­mi­cally iden­ti­fy­ing the pro­gram­ming lan­guage of source code. Our work is based on super­vised learn­ing and intel­li­gent sta­tis­ti­cal fea­tures. We also explored, but aban­doned, a gram­mat­i­cal approach. In test­ing, our imple­men­ta­tion greatly out­per­forms that of an exist­ing tool that relies on a Bayesian classifier.”

    algo­rithms pro­gram­ming clas­si­fi­ca­tion lan­guages archives cute nudge-​​targets
  • [1108.4972] Algo­rithms for the Prob­lems of Length-​​Constrained Heav­i­est Segments

    “We present algo­rithms for length-​​constrained max­i­mum sum seg­ment and max­i­mum den­sity seg­ment prob­lems, in par­tic­u­lar, and the prob­lem of find­ing length-​​constrained heav­i­est seg­ments, in gen­eral, for a sequence of real num­bers. Given a sequence of n real num­bers and two real para­me­ters L and U (L <= U), the max­i­mum sum seg­ment prob­lem is to find a con­sec­u­tive sub­se­quence, called a seg­ment, of length at least L and at most U such that the sum of the num­bers in the sub­se­quence is max­i­mum. The max­i­mum den­sity seg­ment prob­lem is to find a seg­ment of length at least L and at most U such that the den­sity of the num­bers in the sub­se­quence is the max­i­mum. For the first prob­lem with non-​​uniform width there is an algo­rithm with time and space com­plex­i­ties in O(n). We present an algo­rithm with time com­plex­ity in O(n) and space com­plex­ity in O(U). For the sec­ond prob­lem with non-​​uniform width there is a com­bi­na­to­r­ial solu­tion with time com­plex­ity in O(n) and space com­plex­ity in O(U). We present a sim­ple geo­met­ric algo­rithm with the same time and space com­plex­i­ties. We extend our algo­rithms to respec­tively solve the length-​​constrained k max­i­mum sum seg­ments prob­lem in O(n+k) time and O(max{U, k}) space, and the length-​​constrained $k$ max­i­mum den­sity seg­ments prob­lem in O(n min{k, U-​​L}) time and O(U+k) space. We present exten­sions of our algo­rithms to find all the length-​​constrained seg­ments hav­ing user spec­i­fied sum and den­sity in O(n+m) and O(nlog (U-L)+m) times respec­tively, where m is the num­ber of out­put. Pre­vi­ously, there was no known algo­rithm with non-​​trivial result for these prob­lems. We indi­cate the exten­sions of our algo­rithms to higher dimen­sions. All the algo­rithms can be extended in a straight for­ward way to solve the prob­lems with non-​​uniform width and non-​​uniform weight.”

    algo­rithms operations-​​research search-​​algorithms opti­miza­tion nudge-​​targets
  • [1109.4920] Beyond pix­els and regions: A non local patch means (NLPM) method for content-​​level restora­tion, enhance­ment, and recon­struc­tion of degraded doc­u­ment images

    “A patch-​​based non-​​local restora­tion and recon­struc­tion method for pre­pro­cess­ing degraded doc­u­ment images is intro­duced. The method col­lects rel­a­tive data from the whole input image, while the image data are first rep­re­sented by a content-​​level descrip­tor based on patches. This patch-​​equivalent rep­re­sen­ta­tion of the input image is then cor­rected based on sim­i­lar patches iden­ti­fied using a mod­i­fied genetic algo­rithm (GA) result­ing in a low com­pu­ta­tional load. The cor­rected patch-​​equivalent is then con­verted to the out­put restored image. The fact that the method uses the patches at the con­tent level allows it to incor­po­rate high-​​level restora­tion in an objec­tive and self-​​sufficient way. The method has been applied to sev­eral degraded doc­u­ment images, includ­ing the DIBCO’09 con­test dataset with promis­ing results.”

    dig­i­ti­za­tion algo­rithms OCR archives machine-​​learning nudge-​​targets
  • [1105.6205] Cloud-​​based Evo­lu­tion­ary Algo­rithms: An algo­rith­mic study

    “After a proof of con­cept using Drop­box™, a free stor­age and syn­chro­niza­tion ser­vice, showed that an evo­lu­tion­ary algo­rithm using sev­eral dis­sim­i­lar com­put­ers con­nected via WiFi or Eth­er­net had a good scal­ing behav­ior in terms of eval­u­a­tions per sec­ond, it remains to be proved whether that effect also trans­lates to the algo­rith­mic per­for­mance of the algo­rithm. In this paper we will check sev­eral dif­fer­ent, and dif­fi­cult, prob­lems, and see what effects the auto­matic load-​​balancing and asyn­chrony have on the speed of res­o­lu­tion of problems.”

    drop­box genetic-​​algorithm distributed-​​processing tips-​​and-​​tricks