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What is Landscape

Encyclopedia of Artificial Intelligence
A function plot showing the state as the “location” and the objective function value as the “elevation”
Published in Chapter:
Genetic Algorithm Applications to Optimization Modeling
Pi-Sheng Deng (California State University at Stanislaus, USA)
Copyright: © 2009 |Pages: 7
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59904-849-9.ch111
Abstract
Genetic algorithms (GAs) are stochastic search techniques based on the concepts of natural population genetics for exploring a huge solution space in identifying optimal or near optimal solutions (Davis, 1991)(Holland, 1992)(Reeves & Rowe, 2003), and are more likely able to avoid the local optima problem than traditional gradient based hill-climbing optimization techniques when solving complex problems. In essence, GAs are a type of reinforcement learning technique (Grefenstette, 1993), which are able to improve solutions gradually on the basis of the previous solutions. GAs are characterized by their abilities to combine candidate solutions to exploit efficiently a promising area in the solution space while stochastically exploring new search regions with expected improved performance. Many successful applications of this technique are frequently reported across various kinds of industries and businesses, including function optimization (Ballester & Carter, 2004)(Richter & Paxton, 2005), financial risk and portfolio management (Shin & Han, 1999), market trading (Kean, 1995), machine vision and pattern recognition (Vafaie & De Jong, 1998), document retrieval (Gordon, 1988), network topological design (Pierre & Legault, 1998)(Arabas & Kozdrowski, 2001), job shop scheduling (Özdamar, 1999), and optimization for operating system’s dynamic memory configuration (Del Rosso, 2006), among others. In this research we introduce the concept and components of GAs, and then apply the GA technique to the modeling of the batch selection problem of flexible manufacturing systems (FMSs). The model developed in this paper serves as the basis for the experiment in Deng (2007).
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CulturalNature Arga#2
Generally understood as a view over a territory. But can be the representation of this view, a discipline that studies this view, and the act of shaping the territory.
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Memory as Intangible Heritage: WW2 Cemeteries in Cassino and Montecassino
Landscape means an area, as perceived by people, whose character is the result of the action and interaction of natural and/or human factors.
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Transformations of Urban Agro Ecology Landscapes in Territory Transition
Extension of land seen from a specific place and considered as a spectacle.
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Geographic Information Systems (G.I.S.) for the Analysis of Historical Small Towns
Landscape means an area, as perceived by people, whose character is the result of the action and interaction of natural and/or human factors.
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Landscape and Heritage: Didactic Resources for Sustainability Education
The result of the interaction of natural and human elements in the land under the look of an observer.
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Sustainability of Agriculture Territories in South Kazakhstan: Remote Sensing and Geodata for Design of Landscape and Soil Maps
The visible features of an area of land, its landforms, and how they integrate with natural or man-made features. A landscape includes the physical elements of geophysical defined landforms such as (ice-capped) mountains, hills, water bodies such as rivers, lakes, ponds and the sea, living elements of land cover including indigenous vegetation, human elements including different forms of land use, buildings, and structures, and transitory elements such as lighting and weather conditions. Combining both their physical origins and the cultural overlay of human presence, often created over millennia, landscapes reflect a living synthesis of people and place that is vital to local and national identity.
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Green Areas to Introduce Sustainability and Social Responsibility: Training on Agenda 2030
Any environment perceived by the observer as having a defined character, determined by the interaction between nature and human activity.
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A Song to Life in Pandemic Times: Primavera extremeña by Julio Llamazares (2020)
The natural and physical attributes of land together with air and water which change over time and which is made known by people's evolving perceptions and associations, such as beliefs, uses, values and relationships.
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The Landscape Cultural Construction: A Recognition of the Roman Tradition
It is a concept that is expressed according to the relationships that occur in the territory established by the complex interaction between biophysical and human systems which arise from the actions of communities while transforming space as a result of their struggle to survive.
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A Study of the Performance Effect of Genetic Operators
A function plot showing the state as the “location” and the objective function value as the “elevation”.
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Not a “Coke and Chips” Holiday: Museums in Danish Coastal Tourism
The visible features of a land whether untouched by man or created by and in interaction with man.
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Alternative Tool for an Integrative Landscape Interpretation: Case Study of the Arrábida Maritime Coast, Portugal
A complex and dynamic system, where its ecological and cultural components are influencing each other and changing together over the time, expressed in a terrain morphology, vegetation cover, land-use cover, or urban settlement.
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The Role of Landscape in the Representation of Portuguese Wine Producing Regions
Visible features in a portion of land often analyzed about their aesthetic appeal. Concerning landforms and the way they interact with natural and/or artificial features.
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