Nature-inspired search and optimisation heuristics are easy to implement and apply to new problems. However, in order to achieve good performance it is usually necessary to adjust them to the problem at hand. Theoretical foundations for the understanding of such approaches have been built very successfully in the past 20 years but there is a huge disconnect between the theoretical basis and practical applications. The development of powerful analytical tools, significant insights in general limitations of different types of nature-inspired optimisation methods and the development of more practically relevant perspectives for theoretical analysis have brought impressive advances to the theory-side of the field. However, so far impact on the application-side has been limited and few people in the diverse potential application areas have benefitted from these advances.
The main objective of the COST Action is to bridge this gap and improve the applicability of all kinds of nature-inspired optimisation methods. It aims at making theoretical insights more accessible and practical by creating a platform where theoreticians and practitioners can meet and exchange insights, ideas and needs; by developing robust guidelines and practical support for application development based on theoretical insights; by developing theoretical frameworks driven by actual needs arising from practical applications; by training Early Career Investigators in a theory of nature-inspired optimisation methods that clearly aims at practical applications; by broadening participation in the ongoing research of how to develop and apply robust nature-inspired optimisation methods in different application areas.
Project funding:
COST actions
Project results:
The field of soft optimization is the object of endless improvement and the search for optimal solutions. It is no secret that millions of years of natural evolution has found such solutions, from which humanity still needs to learn a lot. This statement also applies to optimization algorithms. During the project, different groups of researchers from several European countries tried to share their experience in this interesting field of research.
Period of project implementation: 2016-03-09 - 2020-03-08
Project partners: Belgium, France, North Macedonia, Italy, Denmark, Germany, Ireland, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, United Kingdom, Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czech Republic, Greece, Israel, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Lithuania