NAME

Algorithm::Evolutionary::Utils - Collection of functions used in all kind of evolutionary algorithms..

SYNOPSIS

 use Algorithm::Evolutionary::Utils qw(entropy genotypic_entropy hamming consensus average random_bitstring random_number_array decode_string vector_compare );

my $this_entropy = entropy( $population );

#Computes consensus sequence (for binary chromosomes
my $this_consensus = consensus( $population); 

DESCRIPTION

Miscellaneous class that contains functions that might be useful somewhere else, especially when computing EA statistics.

METHODS

entropy( $population)

Computes the entropy using the well known Shannon's formula: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_entropy 'to avoid botching highlighting

genotypic_entropy( $population)

Computes the entropy using the well known Shannon's formula: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_entropy 'to avoid botching highlighting; in this case we use chromosome frequencies instead of fitness.

hamming( $string_a, $string_b )

Computes the number of bit positions that are different among two strings, the well known Hamming distance.

consensus( $population, $rough = 0 )

Consensus sequence representing the majority value for each bit; returns the consensus binary string. If "rough", then the bit is set only if the difference is bigger than 0.2 (60/40 proportion). Otherwise, it is set to -

average( $population )

Computes an average of population fitness

random_bitstring( $bits[, $chromify = 0 ] )

Returns a random bitstring with the stated number of bits. Useful for testing, mainly. Returns a "chromosome-like" object if $chromify is 1, mainly putting it into a hashref with the _str key.

random_number_array( $dimensions [, $min = -1] [, $range = 2] )

Returns a random number array with the stated length. Useful for testing, mainly.

decode_string( $chromosome, $gene_size, $min, $range )

Decodes to a vector, each one of whose components ranges between $min and $max. Returns that vector.

It does not work for $gene_size too big. Certainly not for 64, maybe for 32.

vector_compare( $vector_1, $vector_2 )

Compares vectors, returns 1 if 1 dominates 2, -1 if it's the other way round, and 0 if neither dominates the other. Both vectors are supposed to be numeric. Returns 0 if neither is bigger, and they are not equal. Fails if the length is not the same. None of the combinations above, returns undef.

SEE ALSO

This is a spin off from Algorithm::Evolutionary so it's worth the while to check it out. And the spinning was due to finding I needed to include it in examples for the much simpler Algorithm::Evolutionary::Simple.

Copyright

This file is released under the GPL. See the LICENSE file included in this distribution,
or go to http://www.fsf.org/licenses/gpl.txt