Abstract: In the recent past, there has been an increasing interest
in applying evolutionary methods to Knowledge Discovery in
Databases (KDD) and a number of successful applications of Genetic
Algorithms (GA) and Genetic Programming (GP) to KDD have been
demonstrated. The most predominant representation of the
discovered knowledge is the standard Production Rules (PRs) in the
form If P Then D. The PRs, however, are unable to handle
exceptions and do not exhibit variable precision. The Censored
Production Rules (CPRs), an extension of PRs, were proposed by
Michalski & Winston that exhibit variable precision and supports an
efficient mechanism for handling exceptions. A CPR is an
augmented production rule of the form:
If P Then D Unless C, where C (Censor) is an exception to the rule.
Such rules are employed in situations, in which the conditional
statement 'If P Then D' holds frequently and the assertion C holds
rarely. By using a rule of this type we are free to ignore the exception
conditions, when the resources needed to establish its presence are
tight or there is simply no information available as to whether it
holds or not. Thus, the 'If P Then D' part of the CPR expresses
important information, while the Unless C part acts only as a switch
and changes the polarity of D to ~D.
This paper presents a classification algorithm based on evolutionary
approach that discovers comprehensible rules with exceptions in the
form of CPRs.
The proposed approach has flexible chromosome encoding, where
each chromosome corresponds to a CPR. Appropriate genetic
operators are suggested and a fitness function is proposed that
incorporates the basic constraints on CPRs. Experimental results are
presented to demonstrate the performance of the proposed algorithm.
Abstract: Dealing with hundreds of features in character
recognition systems is not unusual. This large number of features
leads to the increase of computational workload of recognition
process. There have been many methods which try to remove
unnecessary or redundant features and reduce feature dimensionality.
Besides because of the characteristics of Farsi scripts, it-s not
possible to apply other languages algorithms to Farsi directly. In this
paper some methods for feature subset selection using genetic
algorithms are applied on a Farsi optical character recognition (OCR)
system. Experimental results show that application of genetic
algorithms (GA) to feature subset selection in a Farsi OCR results in
lower computational complexity and enhanced recognition rate.
Abstract: This article proposes an Ant Colony Optimization
(ACO) metaheuristic to minimize total makespan for scheduling a set
of jobs and assign workers for uniformly related parallel machines.
An algorithm based on ACO has been developed and coded on a
computer program MatlabĀ®, to solve this problem. The paper
explains various steps to apply Ant Colony approach to the problem
of minimizing makespan for the worker assignment & jobs
scheduling problem in a parallel machine model and is aimed at
evaluating the strength of ACO as compared to other conventional
approaches. One data set containing 100 problems (12 Jobs, 03
machines and 10 workers) which is available on internet, has been
taken and solved through this ACO algorithm. The results of our
ACO based algorithm has shown drastically improved results,
especially, in terms of negligible computational effort of CPU, to
reach the optimal solution. In our case, the time taken to solve all 100
problems is even lesser than the average time taken to solve one
problem in the data set by other conventional approaches like GA
algorithm and SPT-A/LMC heuristics.