MetaCartSign in to MyCiteSeer

Include Citations | Advanced Search | Help

Include Citations | Advanced Search | Help

  Are artificial mutation biases unnatural (1999) [10 citations — 5 self]

Download:
Download as a PDF | Download as a PS
by Seth Bullock
Fifth European Conference on Arti Life
http://www.scs.leeds.ac.uk/seth/research/../papers/ecal99_mutation.ps.gz
Add To MetaCart

Abstract:

Abstract. Whilst the rate at which mutations occur in artificial evolutionary systems has received considerable attention, there has been little analysis of the mutation operators themselves. Here attention is drawn to the possibility that inherent biases within such operators might artefactually affect the direction of evolutionary change. Biases associated with several mutation operators are detailed and attempts to alleviate them are discussed. Natural evolution is then shown to be subject to analogous mutation "biases". These tendencies are explicable in terms of (i) selection pressure for low mutation rates, and (ii) selection pressure to avoid parenting non-viable offspring. It is concluded that attempts to eradicate mutation biases from artificial evolutionary systems may lead to evolutionary dynamics that are more unnatural, rather than less. Only through increased awareness of the character of mutation biases, and analyses of our models ' sensitivity to them, can we guard against artefactual results.

Citations

1077 Numerical Recipes: The Art of Scientific Computing – Press, Flannery, et al. - 1986
88 Optimal Mutation Rates in Genetic Search – Back - 1993
84 Self-adaptation in genetic algorithms – Bäck - 1992
43 Pulse code communication – Gray - 1953
10 Representation and Hidden Bias: Gray vs. Binary Coding for Genetic Algorithms – Caruna, Schaffer - 1988
7 Evolution of high mutation rates in experimental populations of E. coli. Nature 387:703–705 – Sniegowski, Gerrish, et al. - 1997
7 An exaggerated preference for simple neural network models of signal evolution – Dawkins, Guilford - 1995
6 Role of mutator alleles in adaptive evolution. Nature 387:700–702 – Taddei, Radman, et al. - 1997
4 The coevolution of mutation rates – Maley - 1995
2 The role of `hidden preferences' in the artificial co-evolution of symmetrical signals – Bullock - 1995
1 A.: Symmetry, beauty and evolution. Nature 372 – Enquist, Arak - 1994
1 Natural selection and mutability – Leigh - 1970
1 E.G.: The evolution of mutation rates. Genetics 73 – Leigh - 1973