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Any thoughts on why the default number for number of individuals to be replaced is set so "low" at 1 individual (out of a default population of 80?). Wouldn't a higher default number lead to improved performance for most cases "out-of-the-box"?
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
There are a lot of tradeoffs in this, for instance, if you increase the number of individuals that are going to go to the next population you may also reduce the diversity and increase the convergence into a local minima, etc.
There are a lot of tradeoffs in this, for instance, if you increase the
number of individuals that are going to go to the next population you may
also reduce the diversity and increase the convergence into a local minima,
etc.
Any thoughts on why the default number for number of individuals to be
replaced is set so "low" at 1 individual (out of a default population of
80?). Wouldn't a higher default number lead to improved performance for
most cases "out-of-the-box"?
—
Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub #72.
Any thoughts on why the default number for number of individuals to be replaced is set so "low" at 1 individual (out of a default population of 80?). Wouldn't a higher default number lead to improved performance for most cases "out-of-the-box"?
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: