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Showing papers by "Center for Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science published in 2005"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that many selection methods are inappropriate for finding polymorphic Nash solutions to variable-sum games.
Abstract: We use evolutionary game theory (EGT) to investigate the dynamics and equilibria of selection methods in coevolutionary algorithms. The canonical selection method used in EGT is equivalent to the standard "fitness-proportional" selection method used in evolutionary algorithms. All attractors of the EGT dynamic are Nash equilibria; we focus on simple symmetric variable-sum games that have polymorphic Nash-equilibrium attractors. Against the dynamics of proportional selection, we contrast the behaviors of truncation selection, (/spl mu/,/spl lambda/),(/spl mu/+/spl lambda/), linear ranking, Boltzmann, and tournament selection. Except for Boltzmann selection, each of the methods we test unconditionally fail to achieve polymorphic Nash equilibrium. Instead, we find point attractors that lack game-theoretic justification, cyclic dynamics, or chaos. Boltzmann selection converges onto polymorphic Nash equilibrium only when selection pressure is sufficiently low; otherwise, we obtain attracting limit-cycles or chaos. Coevolutionary algorithms are often used to search for solutions (e.g., Nash equilibria) of games of strategy; our results show that many selection methods are inappropriate for finding polymorphic Nash solutions to variable-sum games. Another application of coevolution is to model other systems; our results emphasize the degree to which the model's behavior is sensitive to implementation details regarding selection-details that we might not otherwise believe to be critical.

75 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that the sensor-constrained version of the problem is polynomially equivalent to the asymmetric k-center problem and that the time- Constrained versions of the problems are polyno-magnificent to the dominating set problem.

71 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The role of computation and quantitative methods in modern biomedical research is examined to identify emerging scientific, technical, policy and organizational trends and offer suggestions to academia, industry and government on how best to expand the role of computing in their scientific activities.

11 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article necessary and sufficient conditions are given for a generalized polyomino graph to have a perfect matching and to be elementary, respectively, for the case where the graph is a graph.
Abstract: In this paper necessary and sufficient conditions are given for a generalized polyomino graph to have a perfect matching and to be elementary, respectively.

10 citations