Abstract
Negative slope coefficient has been recently introduced and empirically proven a suitable hardness indicator for some well known genetic programming benchmarks, such as the even parity problem, the binomial-3 and the artificial ant on the Santa Fe trail. Nevertheless, the original definition of this measure contains several limitations. This paper points out some of those limitations, presents a new and more relevant definition of the negative slope coefficient and empirically shows the suitability of this new definition as a hardness measure for some genetic programming benchmarks, including the multiplexer, the intertwined spirals problem and the royal trees.
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Vanneschi, L., Tomassini, M., Collard, P., Vérel, S. (2006). Negative Slope Coefficient: A Measure to Characterize Genetic Programming Fitness Landscapes. In: Collet, P., Tomassini, M., Ebner, M., Gustafson, S., Ekárt, A. (eds) Genetic Programming. EuroGP 2006. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 3905. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/11729976_16
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/11729976_16
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