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  2. Hill climbing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hill_climbing

    It iteratively does hill-climbing, each time with a random initial condition . The best is kept: if a new run of hill climbing produces a better than the stored state, it replaces the stored state. Random-restart hill climbing is a surprisingly effective algorithm in many cases.

  3. Min-conflicts algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Min-conflicts_algorithm

    In fact, Constraint Satisfaction Problems that respond best to a min-conflicts solution do well where a greedy algorithm almost solves the problem. Map coloring problems do poorly with Greedy Algorithm as well as Min-Conflicts. Sub areas of the map tend to hold their colors stable and min conflicts cannot hill climb to break out of the local ...

  4. Local search (constraint satisfaction) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_search_(constraint...

    Hill climbing algorithms can only escape a plateau by doing changes that do not change the quality of the assignment. As a result, they can be stuck in a plateau where the quality of assignment has a local maxima. GSAT (greedy sat) was the first local search algorithm for satisfiability, and is a form of hill climbing.

  5. Iterated local search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iterated_local_search

    Iterated Local Search [1] [2] (ILS) is a term in applied mathematics and computer science defining a modification of local search or hill climbing methods for solving discrete optimization problems. Local search methods can get stuck in a local minimum, where no improving neighbors are available.

  6. Stochastic hill climbing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stochastic_hill_climbing

    Stochastic hill climbing is a variant of the basic hill climbing method. While basic hill climbing always chooses the steepest uphill move, "stochastic hill climbing chooses at random from among the uphill moves; the probability of selection can vary with the steepness of the uphill move."

  7. Beam search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beam_search

    Conversely, a beam width of 1 corresponds to a hill-climbing algorithm. [3] The beam width bounds the memory required to perform the search. Since a goal state could potentially be pruned, beam search sacrifices completeness (the guarantee that an algorithm will terminate with a solution, if one exists).

  8. Hill climbing algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Hill_climbing_algorithm&...

    Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Hill climbing algorithm

  9. Memetic algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memetic_algorithm

    In computer science and operations research, a memetic algorithm (MA) is an extension of an evolutionary algorithm (EA) that aims to accelerate the evolutionary search for the optimum. An EA is a metaheuristic that reproduces the basic principles of biological evolution as a computer algorithm in order to solve challenging optimization or ...