Abstract

Although cooperative coevolutionary algorithms are developed for large-scale dynamic optimization via subspace decomposition, they still face difficulties in reacting to environmental changes, in the presence of multiple peaks in the fitness functions and unevenness of subproblems. The resource allocation mechanisms among subproblems in the existing algorithms rely mainly on the fitness improvements already made but not potential ones. On the one hand, there is a lack of sufficient computing resources to achieve potential fitness improvements for some hard subproblems. On the other hand, the existing algorithms waste computing resources aiming to find most of the local optima of problems. In this article, we propose a cooperative particle swarm optimization algorithm to address these issues by introducing a bilevel balanceable resource allocation mechanism. A search strategy in the lower level is introduced to select some promising solutions from an archive based on solution diversity and quality to identify new peaks in every subproblem. A resource allocation strategy in the upper level is introduced to balance the coevolution of multiple subproblems by referring to their historical improvements and more computing resources are allocated for solving the subproblems that perform poorly but are expected to make great fitness improvements. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed algorithm is competitive with the state-of-the-art algorithms in terms of objective function values and response efficiency with respect to environmental changes.

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