Abstract
Cultural learning allows individuals to acquire knowledge from others through non-genetic means. The effect of cultural learning on the evolution of artificial organisms has been the focus of much research. This paper examines the effects of cultural learning on the fitness and diversity of a population and, in addition, the effect of self-adaptive cultural learning parameters on the evolutionary process. The NK fitness landscape model is employed as the problem task and experiments employing populations endowed with both evolutionary and cultural learning are compared to those employing evolutionary learning alone.
Our experiments measure the fitness and diversity of both populations and also track the values of two self-adaptive cultural parameters. Results show that the addition of cultural learning has a beneficial effect on the population in terms of fitness and diversity maintenance. Furthermore, analysis of the self-adaptive parameter values shows the relative quality of the cultural process throughout the experiment and highlights the benefits of self-adaptation over fixed parameter values.
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Curran, D., O’Riordan, C., Sorensen, H. (2007). Evolving Cultural Learning Parameters in an NK Fitness Landscape. In: Almeida e Costa, F., Rocha, L.M., Costa, E., Harvey, I., Coutinho, A. (eds) Advances in Artificial Life. ECAL 2007. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 4648. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-74913-4_31
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-74913-4_31
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