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Nature-inspired metaheuristics in general have started to attract criticism in the research community for hiding their lack of novelty behind an elaborate metaphor.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Weyland|first=Dennis|title=A Rigorous Analysis of the Harmony Search Algorithm: How the Research Community can be Misled by a "Novel" Methodology|journal=[[International Journal of Applied Metaheuristic Computing]]|volume=1|issue=2|year=2010|pages=50–60|doi=10.4018/jamc.2010040104}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|first=Kenneth|last=Sörensen|title=Metaheuristics—the metaphor exposed|journal=[[International Transactions in Operational Research]]|doi=10.1111/itor.12001|volume=22|pages=3–18|year=2013|quote=In recent years, the field of combinatorial optimization has witnessed a true tsunami of “novel” metaheuristic methods, most of them based on a metaphor of some natural or man-made process. The behavior of virtually any species of insects, the flow of water, musicians playing together – it seems that no idea is too far-fetched to serve as inspiration to launch yet another metaheuristic. In this paper, we will argue that this line of research is threatening to lead the area of metaheuristics away from scientific rigor.}}</ref><ref>{{scholarpedia|title=Metaheuristics|urlname=Metaheuristics|curator=[[Fred W. Glover|Fred Glover]] and Kenneth Sörensen}} "A large (and increasing) number of publications focuses on the development of (supposedly) new metaheuristic frameworks based on metaphors. The list of natural or man-made processes that has been used as the basis for a metaheuristic framework now includes such diverse processes as bacterial foraging, river formation, biogeography, musicians playing together, electromagnetism, gravity, colonization by an empire, mine blasts, league championships, clouds, and so forth. An important subcategory is found in metaheuristics based on animal behavior. Ants, bees, bats, wolves, cats, fireflies, eagles, vultures, dolphins, frogs, salmon, vultures, termites, flies, and many others, have all been used to inspire a "novel" metaheuristic. [...] As a general rule, publication of papers on metaphor-based metaheuristics has been limited to second-tier journals and conferences, but some recent exceptions to this rule can be found. Sörensen (2013) states that research in this direction is fundamentally flawed. Most importantly, the author contends that the novelty of the underlying metaphor does not automatically render the resulting framework "novel". On the contrary, there is increasing evidence that very few of the metaphor-based methods are new in any interesting sense."</ref><ref>Jerry Swan, Steven Adriaensen, Mohamed Bishr, Edmund K. Burke, John A. Clark, Patrick De Causmaecker, Juanjo Durillo, Kevin Hammond, Emma Hart, Colin G. Johnson, Zoltan A. Kocsis, Ben Kovitz, Krzysztof Krawiec, Simon Martin, J. J. Merelo, Leandro L. Minku, Ender Özcan, Gisele L. Pappa, Erwin Pesch, Pablo Garcáa-Sánchez, Andrea Schaerf, Kevin Sim, Jim E. Smith, Thomas Stützle, Stefan Voß, Stefan Wagner, Xin Yao. [http://www.cs.nott.ac.uk/~exo/docs/publications/research-agenda-metaheuristic.pdf "A Research Agenda for Metaheuristic Standardization"]. "Metaphors often inspire new metaheuristics, but without mathematical rigor, it can be hard to tell if a new metaheuristic is really distinct from a familiar one. For example, mathematically, ‘Harmony search’ turned out to be a simple variant of ‘[[Evolution Strategies]]’ even though the metaphors that inspired them were quite different. Formally describing state, representation, and operators allows genuine novelty to be distinguished from minor variation."</ref><ref>Alexander Brownlee and John R. Woodward (2015). [http://theconversation.com/why-we-fell-out-of-love-with-algorithms-inspired-by-nature-42718 "Why we fell out of love with algorithms inspired by nature"]. ''[[The Conversation (website)|The Conversation]]''.</ref> In response, [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]]'s ''Journal of Heuristics'' has updated their editorial policy to state that:<ref>[http://www.springer.com/cda/content/document/cda_downloaddocument/Journal+of+Heuristic+Policies+on+Heuristic+Search.pdf?SGWID=0-0-45-1483502-p35487524 Journal of Heuristic Policies on Heuristic Search Research]. Springer. "Proposing new paradigms is only acceptable if they contain innovative basic ideas, such as those that are embedded in classical frameworks like [[genetic algorithm]]s, [[tabu search]], and [[simulated annealing]]. The Journal of Heuristics avoids the publication of articles that repackage and embed old ideas in methods that are claimed to be based on metaphors of natural or manmade systems and processes. These so-called “novel” methods employ analogies that range from intelligent water drops, musicians playing jazz, imperialist societies, leapfrogs, kangaroos, all types of swarms and insects and even mine blast processes (Sörensen, 2013). If a researcher uses a metaphor to stimulate his or her own ideas about a new method, the method must nevertheless be translated into metaphor-free language, so that the strategies employed can be clearly understood, and their novelty is made clearly visible. (See items 2 and 3 below.) Metaphors are cheap and easy to come by. Their use to “window dress” a method is not acceptable."</ref> |
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Nature-inspired [[Metaheuristic|metaheuristics]] in general have started to attract [[List of metaphor-based metaheuristics#Criticism of the metaphor methodology|criticism in the research community]] for hiding their lack of novelty behind an elaborate metaphor.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Weyland|first=Dennis|title=A Rigorous Analysis of the Harmony Search Algorithm: How the Research Community can be Misled by a "Novel" Methodology|journal=[[International Journal of Applied Metaheuristic Computing]]|volume=1|issue=2|year=2010|pages=50–60|doi=10.4018/jamc.2010040104}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|first=Kenneth|last=Sörensen|title=Metaheuristics—the metaphor exposed|journal=[[International Transactions in Operational Research]]|doi=10.1111/itor.12001|volume=22|pages=3–18|year=2013|quote=In recent years, the field of combinatorial optimization has witnessed a true tsunami of “novel” metaheuristic methods, most of them based on a metaphor of some natural or man-made process. The behavior of virtually any species of insects, the flow of water, musicians playing together – it seems that no idea is too far-fetched to serve as inspiration to launch yet another metaheuristic. In this paper, we will argue that this line of research is threatening to lead the area of metaheuristics away from scientific rigor.}}</ref><ref>{{scholarpedia|title=Metaheuristics|urlname=Metaheuristics|curator=[[Fred W. Glover|Fred Glover]] and Kenneth Sörensen}} "A large (and increasing) number of publications focuses on the development of (supposedly) new metaheuristic frameworks based on metaphors. The list of natural or man-made processes that has been used as the basis for a metaheuristic framework now includes such diverse processes as bacterial foraging, river formation, biogeography, musicians playing together, electromagnetism, gravity, colonization by an empire, mine blasts, league championships, clouds, and so forth. An important subcategory is found in metaheuristics based on animal behavior. Ants, bees, bats, wolves, cats, fireflies, eagles, vultures, dolphins, frogs, salmon, vultures, termites, flies, and many others, have all been used to inspire a "novel" metaheuristic. [...] As a general rule, publication of papers on metaphor-based metaheuristics has been limited to second-tier journals and conferences, but some recent exceptions to this rule can be found. Sörensen (2013) states that research in this direction is fundamentally flawed. Most importantly, the author contends that the novelty of the underlying metaphor does not automatically render the resulting framework "novel". On the contrary, there is increasing evidence that very few of the metaphor-based methods are new in any interesting sense."</ref><ref>Jerry Swan, Steven Adriaensen, Mohamed Bishr, Edmund K. Burke, John A. Clark, Patrick De Causmaecker, Juanjo Durillo, Kevin Hammond, Emma Hart, Colin G. Johnson, Zoltan A. Kocsis, Ben Kovitz, Krzysztof Krawiec, Simon Martin, J. J. Merelo, Leandro L. Minku, Ender Özcan, Gisele L. Pappa, Erwin Pesch, Pablo Garcáa-Sánchez, Andrea Schaerf, Kevin Sim, Jim E. Smith, Thomas Stützle, Stefan Voß, Stefan Wagner, Xin Yao. [http://www.cs.nott.ac.uk/~exo/docs/publications/research-agenda-metaheuristic.pdf "A Research Agenda for Metaheuristic Standardization"]. "Metaphors often inspire new metaheuristics, but without mathematical rigor, it can be hard to tell if a new metaheuristic is really distinct from a familiar one. For example, mathematically, ‘Harmony search’ turned out to be a simple variant of ‘[[Evolution Strategies]]’ even though the metaphors that inspired them were quite different. Formally describing state, representation, and operators allows genuine novelty to be distinguished from minor variation."</ref><ref>Alexander Brownlee and John R. Woodward (2015). [http://theconversation.com/why-we-fell-out-of-love-with-algorithms-inspired-by-nature-42718 "Why we fell out of love with algorithms inspired by nature"]. ''[[The Conversation (website)|The Conversation]]''.</ref> In response, [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]]'s ''Journal of Heuristics'' has updated their editorial policy to state that:<ref>[http://www.springer.com/cda/content/document/cda_downloaddocument/Journal+of+Heuristic+Policies+on+Heuristic+Search.pdf?SGWID=0-0-45-1483502-p35487524 Journal of Heuristic Policies on Heuristic Search Research]. Springer. "Proposing new paradigms is only acceptable if they contain innovative basic ideas, such as those that are embedded in classical frameworks like [[genetic algorithm]]s, [[tabu search]], and [[simulated annealing]]. The Journal of Heuristics avoids the publication of articles that repackage and embed old ideas in methods that are claimed to be based on metaphors of natural or manmade systems and processes. These so-called “novel” methods employ analogies that range from intelligent water drops, musicians playing jazz, imperialist societies, leapfrogs, kangaroos, all types of swarms and insects and even mine blast processes (Sörensen, 2013). If a researcher uses a metaphor to stimulate his or her own ideas about a new method, the method must nevertheless be translated into metaphor-free language, so that the strategies employed can be clearly understood, and their novelty is made clearly visible. (See items 2 and 3 below.) Metaphors are cheap and easy to come by. Their use to “window dress” a method is not acceptable."</ref> |