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Artificial evolutionary systems are computer systems, inspired by
ideas from natural evolution and related phenomena. The field has a
long history, dating back to the earliest days of computer science,
but it has only become an established scientific and engineering
discipline since the 1990s, with packages for the commonest form,
genetic algorithms, now widely available. Researchers in the
Asia-Pacific region have participated strongly in the development
of evolutionary systems, with a particular emphasis on the
evolution of intelligent solutions to highly complex problems. The
Asia-Pacific Symposia on Intelligent and Evolutionary Systems have
been an important contributor to this growth in impact, since 1997
providing an annual forum for exchange and dissemination of ideas.
Participants come primarily from East Asia and the Western Pacific,
but contributions are welcomed from around the World. This volume
features a selection of fourteen of the best papers from recent
APSIES. They illustrate the breadth of research in the region, with
applications ranging from business to medicine, from network
optimization to the promotion of innovation.
Artificial evolutionary systems are computer systems, inspired by
ideas from natural evolution and related phenomena. The field has a
long history, dating back to the earliest days of computer science,
but it has only become an established scientific and engineering
discipline since the 1990s, with packages for the commonest form,
genetic algorithms, now widely available. Researchers in the
Asia-Pacific region have participated strongly in the development
of evolutionary systems, with a particular emphasis on the
evolution of intelligent solutions to highly complex problems. The
Asia-Pacific Symposia on Intelligent and Evolutionary Systems have
been an important contributor to this growth in impact, since 1997
providing an annual forum for exchange and dissemination of ideas.
Participants come primarily from East Asia and the Western Pacific,
but contributions are welcomed from around the World. This volume
features a selection of fourteen of the best papers from recent
APSIES. They illustrate the breadth of research in the region, with
applications ranging from business to medicine, from network
optimization to the promotion of innovation.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 15th Australian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, AI 2002, held in Canberra, Australia in December 2002. The 62 revised full papers and 12 posters presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 117 submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on natural language and information retrieval, knowledge representation and reasoning, deduction, learning theory, agents, intelligent systems. Bayesian reasoning and classification, evolutionary algorithms, neural networks, reinforcement learning, constraints and scheduling, neural network applications, satisfiability reasoning, machine learning applications, fuzzy reasoning, and case-based reasoning.
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Simulated Evolution and Learning - Second Asia-Pacific Conference on Simulated Evolution and Learning, SEAL'98, Canberra, Australia, November 24-27, 1998 Selected Papers (Paperback, 1999 ed.)
Bob McKay, Xin Yao, Charles S. Newton, Jong-Hwan Kim, Takeshi Furuhashi
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R1,542
Discovery Miles 15 420
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume contains selected papers presented at the Second
Asia-Paci c C- ference on Simulated Evolution and Learning
(SEAL'98), from 24 to 27 Nov- ber 1998, in Canberra, Australia.
SEAL'98 received a total of 92 submissions (67 papers for the
regular sessions and 25 for the applications sessions). All papers
were reviewed by three independent reviewers. After review, 62
papers were - cepted for oral presentation and 13 for poster
presentation. Some of the accepted papers were selected for
inclusion in this volume. SEAL'98 also featured a fully refereed
special session on Evolutionary Computation in Power Engineering -
ganised by Professor Kit Po Wong and Dr Loi Lei Lai. Two of the ve
accepted papers are included in this volume. The papers included in
these proceedings cover a wide range of topics in simulated
evolution and learning, from self-adaptation to dynamic modelling,
from reinforcement learning to agent systems, from evolutionary
games to e- lutionary economics, and from novel theoretical results
to successful applications, among others. SEAL'98 attracted 94
participants from 14 di erent countries, namely A- tralia, Belgium,
Brazil, Germany, Iceland, India, Japan, South Korea, New Z- land,
Portugal, Sweden, Taiwan, UK and the USA. It had three
distinguished international scientists as keynote speakers, giving
talks on natural computation (Hans-Paul Schwefel), reinforcement
learning (Richard Sutton), and novel m- els in evolutionary design
(John Gero). More information about SEAL'98 is still available at
http: //www.cs.adfa.edu.au/conference/seal98/.
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