Abstract

The artificial hummingbird algorithm (AHA) has been applied in various fields of science and provided promising solutions. Although the algorithm has demonstrated merits in the optimization area, it suffers from local optimum stagnation and poor exploration of the search space. To overcome these drawbacks, this study redesigns the update mechanism of the original AHA algorithm with the natural survivor method (NSM) and proposes a novel metaheuristic called NSM-AHA. The strength of the developed algorithm is that it performs population management not only according to the fitness function value but also according to the NSM score value. The adopted strategy contributes to NSM-AHA exhibiting powerful local optimum avoidance and unique exploration ability. The optimization ability of the proposed NSM-AHA algorithm was compared with 21 state-of-the-art algorithms over CEC 2017 and CEC 2020 benchmark functions with dimensions of 30, 50, and 100, respectively. Based on the Friedman test results, it was observed that NSM-AHA ranked 1st out of 22 competitive algorithms, while the original AHA ranked 8th. This result highlights that the NSM update mechanism provides a remarkable evolution in the convergence performance of the original AHA algorithm. Furthermore, two constrained engineering problems including the optimization of single-diode solar cell model (SDSCM) parameters and the design of a power system stabilizer (PSS) are solved with the proposed algorithm. The NSM-AHA algorithm provided better results compared to other algorithms with a value of 9.86E − 04 root mean square error for SDSCM and 1.43E − 03 integral time square error for PSS. The experimental results showed that the proposed NSM-AHA is a competitive optimizer for solving global and engineering problems.

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