Publication | Closed Access
Visualizing Mutually Nondominating Solution Sets in Many-Objective Optimization
122
Citations
47
References
2012
Year
Mathematical ProgrammingLarge-scale Global OptimizationEngineeringSimultaneous VisualizationVisualization (Graphics)Evolutionary Multimodal OptimizationData ScienceComputational VisualizationDiscrete MathematicsComputational GeometryVisual AnalyticsGeometric ModelingProblem OwnerComputer ScienceParallel VisualizationMany-objective OptimizationEuclidean SpaceNatural SciencesOptimization Problem
As many-objective optimization algorithms mature, the problem owner is faced with visualizing and understanding a set of mutually nondominating solutions in a high dimensional space. We review existing methods and present new techniques to address this problem. We address a common problem with the well-known heatmap visualization, since the often arbitrary ordering of rows and columns renders the heatmap unclear, by using spectral seriation to rearrange the solutions and objectives and thus enhance the clarity of the heatmap. A multiobjective evolutionary optimizer is used to further enhance the simultaneous visualization of solutions in objective and parameter space. Two methods for visualizing multiobjective solutions in the plane are introduced. First, we use RadViz and exploit interpretations of barycentric coordinates for convex polygons and simplices to map a mutually nondominating set to the interior of a regular convex polygon in the plane, providing an intuitive representation of the solutions and objectives. Second, we introduce a new measure of the similarity of solutions - the dominance distance - which captures the order relations between solutions. This metric provides an embedding in Euclidean space, which is shown to yield coherent visualizations in two dimensions. The methods are illustrated on standard test problems and data from a benchmark many-objective problem.
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