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  2. Yao's principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yao's_principle

    Any randomized algorithm may be interpreted as a randomized choice among deterministic algorithms, and thus as a mixed strategy for Alice. Similarly, a non-random algorithm may be thought of as a pure strategy for Alice. In any two-player zero-sum game, if one player chooses a mixed strategy, then the other player has an optimal pure strategy ...

  3. Randomized algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randomized_algorithm

    A randomized algorithm is an algorithm that employs a degree of randomness as part of its logic or procedure. The algorithm typically uses uniformly random bits as an auxiliary input to guide its behavior, in the hope of achieving good performance in the "average case" over all possible choices of random determined by the random bits; thus either the running time, or the output (or both) are ...

  4. Random optimization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_optimization

    Random optimization (RO) is a family of numerical optimization methods that do not require the gradient of the problem to be optimized and RO can hence be used on functions that are not continuous or differentiable. Such optimization methods are also known as direct-search, derivative-free, or black-box methods.

  5. Hill climbing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hill_climbing

    Random-restart hill climbing is a meta-algorithm built on top of the hill climbing algorithm. It is also known as Shotgun hill climbing . It iteratively does hill-climbing, each time with a random initial condition x 0 {\displaystyle x_{0}} .

  6. LP-type problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LP-type_problem

    Seidel (1991) gave an algorithm for low-dimensional linear programming that may be adapted to the LP-type problem framework. Seidel's algorithm takes as input the set S and a separate set X (initially empty) of elements known to belong to the optimal basis. It then considers the remaining elements one-by-one in a random order, performing ...

  7. Las Vegas algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Las_vegas_algorithm

    Las Vegas algorithms were introduced by László Babai in 1979, in the context of the graph isomorphism problem, as a dual to Monte Carlo algorithms. [3] Babai [4] introduced the term "Las Vegas algorithm" alongside an example involving coin flips: the algorithm depends on a series of independent coin flips, and there is a small chance of failure (no result).

  8. Random sample consensus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_sample_consensus

    Optimal RANSAC [4] was proposed to handle both these problems and is capable of finding the optimal set for heavily contaminated sets, even for an inlier ratio under 5%. Another disadvantage of RANSAC is that it requires the setting of problem-specific thresholds. RANSAC can only estimate one model for a particular data set.

  9. Local search (optimization) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_search_(optimization)

    Local search is an anytime algorithm; it can return a valid solution even if it's interrupted at any time after finding the first valid solution. Local search is typically an approximation or incomplete algorithm because the search may stop even if the current best solution found is not optimal. This can happen even if termination happens ...