| hc | R Documentation |
The Heuristic Crossover (HC) operator is a conditional operator (Herrera et.al, 1998; Umbarkar & Sheth, 2005). A random r value is generated in the range [0,1]. Then if Parent2's fitness value is greater than or equal to Parent1's fitness value, the difference between them is weighted by r and added to Parent2. It is subtracted in minimization problems. This operator produces a single offspring, but due to the random value of r, repeated offspring may result in different offspring.
hc(x1, x2, fitfunc, cxon, ...)
x1 |
A vector. It contains the chromosomal information of parent-1. |
x2 |
A vector. It contains the chromosomal information of parent-2. |
fitfunc |
Fitness Function |
cxon |
Number of offspring to be generated as a result of crossover |
... |
Further arguments passed to or from other methods. |
A matrix containing the generated offsprings.
Zeynel Cebeci & Erkut Tekeli
Herrera, F., Lozano, M. and Verdegay, J.L. (1998). Tackling real-coded genetic algorithms: Operators and tools for behavioural analysis. Artificial Intellegence Review, 12(4), 265-319 Umbarkar, A.J. and Sheth P.D. (2015). Crossover operators in genetic algorithms: A riview, ICTACT Journal on Soft Computing, 6(1), 1083-1092.
cross,
px1,
kpx,
sc,
rsc,
hux,
ux,
ux2,
mx,
rrc,
disc,
atc,
cpc,
eclc,
raoc,
dc,
ax,
sax,
wax,
lax,
bx,
ebx,
blxa,
blxab,
lapx,
elx,
geomx,
spherex,
pmx,
mpmx,
upmx,
ox,
ox2,
mpx,
erx,
pbx,
pbx2,
cx,
icx,
smc
fitfunc = function(x, ...) 2*(x[1]-1)^2 + 5*(x[2]-2)^2 + 10 parent1 = c(1.1, 1.6, 0.0, 1.1, 1.4, 1.2) parent2 = c(1.2, 0.0, 0.0, 1.5, 1.2, 1.4) hc(parent1, parent2, fitfunc)
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