A close neighbor mobility method using particle swarm optimizer for solving multimodal optimization problems

Date

2020-05

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Niching is an important technique for multimodal optimization. Most existing niching methods require specification of certain niching parameters in order to perform well. But these parameters are usually difficult to set because they depend on the problem. The particle swarm optimization algorithm using the ring neighborhood topology does not require any niche parameters, but the determination of the particle neighborhood in this method is based on the subscript of the particle, and the result fails to achieve the best performance. For better performance, in this paper, a particle swarm optimization algorithm based on the ring neighborhood topology of Euclidean distance between particles is proposed, which is called the close neighbor mobility optimization algorithm. The algorithm mainly includes the following three strategies: elite selection mechanism, close neighbor mobility strategy and modified DE strategy. It mainly uses the Euclidean distance between particles. Each particle forms its own unique niche, evolves in a local scope, and finally locates multiple global optimal solutions with high precision. The algorithm greatly improves the accuracy of the particle. The experimental results show that the close neighbor mobility optimization algorithm has better performance than most single-objective multi-modal algorithms.

Description

The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.

Keywords

Multimodal optimization, particle swarm optimization, ring neighborhood topology, niche

Citation

J. Zou, Q. Deng, S. Yang, and J. Zheng. (2020) A close neighbor mobility method using particle swarm optimizer for solving multimodal optimization problems. Information Sciences, 519, pp. 332-347

Rights

Research Institute