A gene expression programming algorithm for discovering classification rules in the multi-objective space
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- @Article{Alain18,
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author = "Alain Guerrero-Enamorado and Carlos Morell and
Sebastian Ventura",
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title = "A gene expression programming algorithm for
discovering classification rules in the multi-objective
space",
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journal = "International Journal of Computational Intelligence
Systems",
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volume = "11",
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number = "1",
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pages = "540--559",
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year = "2018",
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keywords = "genetic algorithms, genetic programming, Gene
expression programming (GEP), Reference Point Based
Multi-objective Evolutionary Algorithm (R-NSGA-II),
Multi-objective Evolutionary Algorithm (MOEA),
Multi-objective classification, Classification",
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publisher = "Atlantis Press",
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ISSN = "1875-6883",
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URL = "https://www.atlantis-press.com/journals/ijcis/25891989",
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DOI = "doi:10.2991/ijcis.11.1.40",
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size = "20 pages",
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abstract = "Multi-objective evolutionary algorithms have been
criticized when they are applied to classification rule
mining, and, more specifically, in the optimization of
more than two objectives due to their computational
complexity. It is known that a multi-objective space is
much richer to be explored than a single-objective
space. In consequence, there are only few
multi-objective algorithms for classification and their
empirical assessed is quite limited. On the other hand,
gene expression programming has emerged as an
alternative to carry out the evolutionary process at
genotypic level in a really efficient way. This paper
introduces a new multi-objective algorithm for
discovering classification rules, AR-NSGEP (Adaptive
Reference point based Non-dominated Sorting with Gene
Expression Programming). It is a multi-objective
evolution of a previous single-objective algorithm. In
AR-NSGEP, the multi-objective search was based on the
well known R-NSGA-II algorithm, replacing GA with GEP
technology. Four objectives led the rules-discovery
process, three of them (sensitivity, specificity and
precision) were focused on promoting accuracy and the
fourth (simpleness) on the interpretability of rules.
AR-NSGEP was evaluated on several benchmark data sets
and compared against six rule-based classifiers widely
used. The AR-NSGEP, with four-objectives, achieved a
significant improvement of the AUC metric with respect
to most of the algorithms assessed, while the
predictive accuracy and number of rules in the obtained
models reached to acceptable results.",
- }
Genetic Programming entries for
Alain Guerrero-Enamorado
Carlos Morell
Sebastian Ventura
Citations