Diagonal Acceleration for Covariance Matrix Adaptation Evolution Strategies
Author(s) -
Youhei Akimoto,
Nikolaus Hansen
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
evolutionary computation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.732
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1530-9304
pISSN - 1063-6560
DOI - 10.1162/evco_a_00260
Subject(s) - cma es , diagonal , separable space , mathematics , covariance matrix , matrix (chemical analysis) , mathematical optimization , speedup , dimension (graph theory) , acceleration , evolution strategy , algorithm , computer science , covariance function , combinatorics , evolutionary algorithm , mathematical analysis , materials science , geometry , physics , classical mechanics , composite material , operating system
We introduce an acceleration for covariance matrix adaptation evolution strategies (CMA-ES) by means of adaptive diagonal decoding (dd-CMA). This diagonal acceleration endows the default CMA-ES with the advantages of separable CMA-ES without inheriting its drawbacks. Technically, we introduce a diagonal matrix D hat expresses coordinate-wise variances of the sampling distribution in DCD form. The diagonal matrix can learn a rescaling of the problem in the coordinates within a linear number of function evaluations. Diagonal decoding can also exploit separability of the problem, but, crucially, does not compromise the performance on nonseparable problems. The latter is accomplished by modulating the learning rate for the diagonal matrix based on the condition number of the underlying correlation matrix. dd-CMA-ES not only combines the advantages of default and separable CMA-ES, but may achieve overadditive speedup: it improves the performance, and even the scaling, of the better of default and separable CMA-ES on classes of nonseparable test functions that reflect, arguably, a landscape feature commonly observed in practice. The article makes two further secondary contributions: we introduce two different approaches to guarantee positive definiteness of the covariance matrix with active CMA, which is valuable in particular with large population size; we revise the default parameter setting in CMA-ES, proposing accelerated settings in particular for large dimension. All our contributions can be viewed as independent improvements of CMA-ES, yet they are also complementary and can be seamlessly combined. In numerical experiments with dd-CMA-ES up to dimension 5120, we observe remarkable improvements over the original covariance matrix adaptation on functions with coordinate-wise ill-conditioning. The improvement is observed also for large population sizes up to about dimension squared.
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