First-Hitting Times Under Additive Drift

05/22/2018
by   Timo Kötzing, et al.
0

For the last ten years, almost every theoretical result concerning the expected run time of a randomized search heuristic used drift theory, making it the arguably most important tool in this domain. Its success is due to its ease of use and its powerful result: drift theory allows the user to derive bounds on the expected first-hitting time of a random process by bounding expected local changes of the process -- the drift. This is usually far easier than bounding the expected first-hitting time directly. Due to the widespread use of drift theory, it is of utmost importance to have the best drift theorems possible. We improve the fundamental additive, multiplicative, and variable drift theorems by stating them in a form as general as possible and providing examples of why the restrictions we keep are still necessary. Our additive drift theorem for upper bounds only requires the process to be nonnegative, that is, we remove unnecessary restrictions like a finite, discrete, or bounded search space. As corollaries, the same is true for our upper bounds in the case of variable and multiplicative drift.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
02/09/2018

Drift Theory in Continuous Search Spaces: Expected Hitting Time of the (1+1)-ES with 1/5 Success Rule

This paper explores the use of the standard approach for proving runtime...
research
07/09/2013

General Drift Analysis with Tail Bounds

Drift analysis is one of the state-of-the-art techniques for the runtime...
research
05/22/2018

Intuitive Analyses via Drift Theory

Humans are bad with probabilities, and the analysis of randomized algori...
research
04/11/2019

Multiplicative Up-Drift

Drift analysis aims at translating the expected progress of an evolution...
research
06/12/2020

Improved Fixed-Budget Results via Drift Analysis

Fixed-budget theory is concerned with computing or bounding the fitness ...
research
11/30/2012

Erratum: Simplified Drift Analysis for Proving Lower Bounds in Evolutionary Computation

This erratum points out an error in the simplified drift theorem (SDT) [...
research
07/23/2023

Drift Models on Complex Projective Space for Electron-Nuclear Double Resonance

ENDOR spectroscopy is an important tool to determine the complicated thr...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset