Behavioral Program Synthesis with Genetic Programming [electronic resource] / by Krzysztof Krawiec.
By: Krawiec, Krzysztof [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: BookSeries: Studies in Computational Intelligence: 618Publisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2016Description: XXI, 172 p. 25 illus., 15 illus. in color. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783319275659.Subject(s): Engineering | Software engineering | Artificial intelligence | Computational intelligence | Engineering | Computational Intelligence | Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics) | Software Engineering/Programming and Operating SystemsAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 006.3 Online resources: Click here to access onlineProgram Synthesis -- Limitations of Conventional Program Evaluation -- The Framework of Behavioral Program Synthesis -- Behavioral Assessment of Test Difficulty -- Semantic Genetic Programming -- Synthesizing Programs with Consistent Execution Traces -- Pattern-guided Program Synthesis -- Behavioral Code Reuse -- Search Drivers -- Experimental Assessment of Search Drivers -- Implications of the Behavioral Perspective -- Future Perspectives.
Genetic programming (GP) is a popular heuristic methodology of program synthesis with origins in evolutionary computation. In this generate-and-test approach, candidate programs are iteratively produced and evaluated. The latter involves running programs on tests, where they exhibit complex behaviors reflected in changes of variables, registers, or memory. That behavior not only ultimately determines program output, but may also reveal its `hidden qualities' and important characteristics of the considered synthesis problem. However, the conventional GP is oblivious to most of that information and usually cares only about the number of tests passed by a program. This `evaluation bottleneck' leaves search algorithm underinformed about the actual and potential qualities of candidate programs. This book proposes behavioral program synthesis, a conceptual framework that opens GP to detailed information on program behavior in order to make program synthesis more efficient. Several existing and novel mechanisms subscribing to that perspective to varying extent are presented and discussed, including implicit fitness sharing, semantic GP, co-solvability, trace convergence analysis, pattern-guided program synthesis, and behavioral archives of subprograms. The framework involves several concepts that are new to GP, including execution record, combined trace, and search driver, a generalization of objective function. Empirical evidence gathered in several presented experiments clearly demonstrates the usefulness of behavioral approach. The book contains also an extensive discussion of implications of the behavioral perspective for program synthesis and beyond. .
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