Search Methodologies 2013
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4614-6940-7_20
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Hyper-heuristics

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Cited by 32 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 32 publications
(27 reference statements)
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“…Both selection and generation hyper-heuristics can be further categorized into construction or perturbation heuristics. More on hyper-heuristics can be found in [3,13,16]. Selection hyperheuristics have been well studied, and gave rise to the CHeSC 2011 competition 3 ; further details of this can be found in [7,12] and at the CHeSC website, and of the winning hyper-heuristic by Misir et al in [11].…”
Section: Introduction and Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both selection and generation hyper-heuristics can be further categorized into construction or perturbation heuristics. More on hyper-heuristics can be found in [3,13,16]. Selection hyperheuristics have been well studied, and gave rise to the CHeSC 2011 competition 3 ; further details of this can be found in [7,12] and at the CHeSC website, and of the winning hyper-heuristic by Misir et al in [11].…”
Section: Introduction and Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Metaheuristic techniques are often very effective; however, there can be some reluctance to use them for money-critical problems. Practitioners in industry often favor the use of very simple and readily understandable methods even if they deliver relatively inferior results (Ross 2005). Among the main criticisms of stochastic-based problem solving techniques are: (1) the fact that they involve some randomness and unpredictability, so that identical runs may deliver very different results; (2) there is little understanding about their average-and worst-case behavior (Ross and Marín-Blázquez 2005); (3) solutions quality greatly depend on a good parameter choice; and (4) the parameter tunning task requires time, knowledge and experience about the problem domain and properties which makes metaheuristics problemspecific solution methods that can be developed and deployed only by experts (Ross 2005;Bilgin et al 2006).…”
Section: The 2d Irregular Bin Packing Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In bin packing, especially in the 1D case, instances with many small items are not hard, since the small items can be employed as sand to fill up the remaining space when large items were packed. Difficulty arises when most of the pieces have an area that is a significant fraction of the total object area, for example at least 20 % of the object area, so that the challenge is to find the subset among a large number of pieces to be placed in a given object (Ross 2005). We hypothesize that the DJD heuristic is intended for these kind of hard instances; because, exactly as stated, it works well in many problems known to be hard, but it fails in other types of problem.…”
Section: The Djd Heuristicmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In this case, a hyper-heuristic was defined as a high-level approach that, given a particular problem instance and a number of atomic heuristics, selects and applies an appropriate heuristic at each decision point [14,96]. This definition of hyper-heuristics was also expanded later to refer to an automated methodology for selecting or generating heuristics to solve hard computational search problems [16].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%