LGQUANT-PHDec 27, 2024

Tensor Network Estimation of Distribution Algorithms

arXiv:2412.19780v11 citationsh-index: 7
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of effectively integrating powerful generative models into optimization routines for researchers in computational science and machine learning, though it is incremental in nature.

The paper investigates tensor network-based generative models within evolutionary optimization algorithms, finding that better generative models do not necessarily improve optimization performance, and adding a mutation operator often enhances results.

Tensor networks are a tool first employed in the context of many-body quantum physics that now have a wide range of uses across the computational sciences, from numerical methods to machine learning. Methods integrating tensor networks into evolutionary optimization algorithms have appeared in the recent literature. In essence, these methods can be understood as replacing the traditional crossover operation of a genetic algorithm with a tensor network-based generative model. We investigate these methods from the point of view that they are Estimation of Distribution Algorithms (EDAs). We find that optimization performance of these methods is not related to the power of the generative model in a straightforward way. Generative models that are better (in the sense that they better model the distribution from which their training data is drawn) do not necessarily result in better performance of the optimization algorithm they form a part of. This raises the question of how best to incorporate powerful generative models into optimization routines. In light of this we find that adding an explicit mutation operator to the output of the generative model often improves optimization performance.

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