NEAIApr 9, 2024

An Enhanced Grey Wolf Optimizer with Elite Inheritance and Balance Search Mechanisms

arXiv:2404.06524v15 citationsh-index: 17
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This is an incremental improvement for researchers and practitioners in optimization algorithms, addressing specific bottlenecks in GWO.

The paper tackled two design flaws in the Grey Wolf Optimizer (GWO) by proposing an enhanced version with elite inheritance and balance search mechanisms, which outperformed other meta-heuristic algorithms in accuracy and convergence speed on benchmark functions and engineering problems.

The Grey Wolf Optimizer (GWO) is recognized as a novel meta-heuristic algorithm inspired by the social leadership hierarchy and hunting mechanism of grey wolves. It is well-known for its simple parameter setting, fast convergence speed, and strong optimization capability. In the original GWO, there are two significant design flaws in its fundamental optimization mechanisms. Problem (1): the algorithm fails to inherit from elite positions from the last iteration when generating the next positions of the wolf population, potentially leading to suboptimal solutions. Problem (2): the positions of the population are updated based on the central position of the three leading wolves (alpha, beta, delta), without a balanced mechanism between local and global search. To tackle these problems, an enhanced Grey Wolf Optimizer with Elite Inheritance Mechanism and Balance Search Mechanism, named as EBGWO, is proposed to improve the effectiveness of the position updating and the quality of the convergence solutions. The IEEE CEC 2014 benchmark functions suite and a series of simulation tests are employed to evaluate the performance of the proposed algorithm. The simulation tests involve a comparative study between EBGWO, three GWO variants, GWO and two well-known meta-heuristic algorithms. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed EBGWO algorithm outperforms other meta-heuristic algorithms in both accuracy and convergence speed. Three engineering optimization problems are adopted to prove its capability in processing real-world problems. The results indicate that the proposed EBGWO outperforms several popular algorithms.

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