Simulated annealing

Simulated annealing (SA) is a probabilistic technique for approximating the global optimum of a given function. Specifically, it is a metaheuristic to approximate global optimization in a large search space. It is often used when the search space is discrete (e.g., all tours that visit a given set of cities). For problems where finding the precise global optimum is less important than finding an acceptable local optimum in a fixed amount of time, simulated annealing may be preferable to alternatives such as brute-force search or gradient descent.

Simulated annealing interprets slow cooling as a slow decrease in the probability of accepting worse solutions as it explores the solution space. Accepting worse solutions is a fundamental property of metaheuristics because it allows for a more extensive search for the optimal solution.

The method was independently described by Scott Kirkpatrick, C. Daniel Gelatt and Mario P. Vecchi in 1983,[1] and by Vlado Černý in 1985.[2] The method is an adaptation of the Metropolis–Hastings algorithm, a Monte Carlo method to generate sample states of a thermodynamic system, invented by M.N. Rosenbluth and published by N. Metropolis et al. in 1953.[3]

Overview

The state of some physical system s, and the function E(s) to be minimized is analogous to the internal energy of the system in that state. The goal is to bring the system, from an arbitrary initial state, to a state with the minimum possible energy.

Simulated annealing searching for a maximum. The objective here is to get to the highest point; however, it is not enough to use a simple hill climb algorithm, as there are many local maxima. By cooling the temperature slowly the global maximum is found.

The basic iteration

At each step, the SA heuristic considers some neighbouring state s' of the current state s, and probabilistically decides between moving the system to state s' or staying in state s. These probabilities ultimately lead the system to move to states of lower energy. Typically this step is repeated until the system reaches a state that is good enough for the application, or until a given computation budget has been exhausted.

The neighbours of a state

The neighbours of a state are new states of the problem that are produced after altering a given state in some well-defined way. For example, in the traveling salesman problem each state is typically defined as a permutation of the cities to be visited. The neighbours of a state are the set of permutations that are produced, for example, by reversing the order of any two successive cities. The well-defined way in which the states are altered in order to find neighbouring states is called a "move" and different moves give different sets of neighbouring states. These moves usually result in minimal alterations of the last state, as the previous example depicts, in order to help the algorithm keep the better parts of the solution and change only the worse parts. In the traveling salesman problem, the parts of the solution are the city connections.

Searching for neighbours of a state is fundamental to optimization because the final solution will come after a tour of successive neighbours. Simple heuristics move by finding best neighbour after best neighbour and stop when they have reached a solution which has no neighbours that are better solutions. The problem with this approach is that the neighbours of a state are not guaranteed to contain any of the existing better solutions. This means that failure to find a better solution among them does not guarantee that no better solution exists. This is why the best solution found by such algorithms is called a local optimum in contrast with the actual best solution which is called a global optimum. Metaheuristics use the neighbours of a solution as a way to explore the solutions space, and although they prefer better neighbours, they also accept worse neighbours in order to avoid getting stuck in local optima. If the algorithm were run for an infinite amount of time, the global optimum would be found.

Acceptance probabilities

The probability of making the transition from the current state s to a candidate new state s' is specified by an acceptance probability function P(e, e', T), that depends on the energies e = E(s) and e' = E(s') of the two states, and on a global time-varying parameter T called the temperature. States with a smaller energy are better than those with a greater energy. The probability function P must be positive even when e' is greater than e. This feature prevents the method from becoming stuck at a local minimum that is worse than the global one.

When T tends to zero, the probability P(e, e', T) must tend to zero if e' > e and to a positive value otherwise. For sufficiently small values of T, the system will then increasingly favor moves that go "downhill" (i.e., to lower energy values), and avoid those that go "uphill." With T=0 the procedure reduces to the greedy algorithm, which makes only the downhill transitions.

In the original description of SA, the probability P(e, e', T) was equal to 1 when e' < e — i.e., the procedure always moved downhill when it found a way to do so, irrespective of the temperature. Many descriptions and implementations of SA still take this condition as part of the method's definition. However, this condition is not essential for the method to work.

The P function is usually chosen so that the probability of accepting a move decreases when the difference e'-e increases—that is, small uphill moves are more likely than large ones. However, this requirement is not strictly necessary, provided that the above requirements are met.

Given these properties, the temperature T plays a crucial role in controlling the evolution of the state s of the system with regard to its sensitivity to the variations of system energies. To be precise, for a large T, the evolution of s is sensitive to coarser energy variations, while it is sensitive to finer energy variations when T is small.

The annealing schedule

The name and inspiration of the algorithm demand an interesting feature related to the temperature variation to be embedded in the operational characteristics of the algorithm. This necessitates a gradual reduction of the temperature as the simulation proceeds. The algorithm starts initially with T set to a high value (or infinity), and then it is decreased at each step following some annealing schedule—which may be specified by the user, but must end with T=0 towards the end of the allotted time budget. In this way, the system is expected to wander initially towards a broad region of the search space containing good solutions, ignoring small features of the energy function; then drift towards low-energy regions that become narrower and narrower; and finally move downhill according to the steepest descent heuristic.

Fast
Slow

Example illustrating the effect of cooling schedule on the performance of simulated annealing. The problem is to rearrange the pixels of an image so as to minimize a certain potential energy function, which causes similar colours to attract at short range and repel at a slightly larger distance. The elementary moves swap two adjacent pixels. These images were obtained with a fast cooling schedule (left) and a slow cooling schedule (right), producing results similar to amorphous and crystalline solids, respectively.

For any given finite problem, the probability that the simulated annealing algorithm terminates with a global optimal solution approaches 1 as the annealing schedule is extended.[4] This theoretical result, however, is not particularly helpful, since the time required to ensure a significant probability of success will usually exceed the time required for a complete search of the solution space.

Pseudocode

The following pseudocode presents the simulated annealing heuristic as described above. It starts from a state s0 and continues to either a maximum of kmax steps or until a state with an energy of emin or less is found. In the process, the call neighbour(s) should generate a randomly chosen neighbour of a given state s; the call random(0, 1) should pick and return a value in the range [0, 1], uniformly at random. The annealing schedule is defined by the call temperature(r), which should yield the temperature to use, given the fraction r of the time budget that has been expended so far.

  • Let s = s0
  • For k = 0 through kmax (exclusive):
    • T ← temperature(kkmax)
    • Pick a random neighbour, snew ← neighbour(s)
    • If P(E(s), E(snew), T) ≥ random(0, 1), move to the new state:
      • ssnew
  • Output: the final state s

Selecting the parameters

In order to apply the SA method to a specific problem, one must specify the following parameters: the state space, the energy (goal) function E(), the candidate generator procedure neighbour(), the acceptance probability function P(), and the annealing schedule temperature() AND initial temperature <init temp>. These choices can have a significant impact on the method's effectiveness. Unfortunately, there are no choices of these parameters that will be good for all problems, and there is no general way to find the best choices for a given problem. The following sections give some general guidelines.

Diameter of the search graph

Simulated annealing may be modeled as a random walk on a search graph, whose vertices are all possible states, and whose edges are the candidate moves. An essential requirement for the neighbour() function is that it must provide a sufficiently short path on this graph from the initial state to any state which may be the global optimum. (In other words, the diameter of the search graph must be small.) In the traveling salesman example above, for instance, the search space for n=20 cities has n! = 2,432,902,008,176,640,000 (2.4 quintillion) states; yet the neighbour generator function that swaps two consecutive cities can get from any state (tour) to any other state in at most n(n-1)/2 = 190 steps (this is equivalent to \sum_{i=1}^{n-1} i).

Transition probabilities

To investigate the behavior of simulated annealing on a particular problem, it can be useful to consider the transition probabilities that result from the various design choices made in the implementation of the algorithm. For each edge (s,s') of the search graph, the transition probability is defined as the probability that the SA algorithm will move to state s' when its current state is s. This probability depends on the current temperature as specified by temp(), on the order in which the candidate moves are generated by the neighbour() function, and on the acceptance probability function P(). (Note that the transition probability is not simply P(e, e', T), because the candidates are tested serially.)

Acceptance probabilities

The specification of neighbour(), P(), and temperature() is partially redundant. In practice, it's common to use the same acceptance function P() for many problems, and adjust the other two functions according to the specific problem.

In the formulation of the method by Kirkpatrick et al., the acceptance probability function P(e, e', T) was defined as 1 if e' < e, and \exp(-(e'-e)/T) otherwise. This formula was superficially justified by analogy with the transitions of a physical system; it corresponds to the Metropolis-Hastings algorithm, in the case where T=1 and the proposal distribution of Metropolis-Hastings is symmetric. However, this acceptance probability is often used for simulated annealing even when the neighbour() function, which is analogous to the proposal distribution in Metropolis-Hastings, is not symmetric, or not probabilistic at all. As a result, the transition probabilities of the simulated annealing algorithm do not correspond to the transitions of the analogous physical system, and the long-term distribution of states at a constant temperature T need not bear any resemblance to the thermodynamic equilibrium distribution over states of that physical system, at any temperature. Nevertheless, most descriptions of SA assume the original acceptance function, which is probably hard-coded in many implementations of SA.

Efficient candidate generation

When choosing the candidate generator neighbour(), one must consider that after a few iterations of the SA algorithm, the current state is expected to have much lower energy than a random state. Therefore, as a general rule, one should skew the generator towards candidate moves where the energy of the destination state s' is likely to be similar to that of the current state. This heuristic (which is the main principle of the Metropolis-Hastings algorithm) tends to exclude "very good" candidate moves as well as "very bad" ones; however, the former are usually much less common than the latter, so the heuristic is generally quite effective.

In the traveling salesman problem above, for example, swapping two consecutive cities in a low-energy tour is expected to have a modest effect on its energy (length); whereas swapping two arbitrary cities is far more likely to increase its length than to decrease it. Thus, the consecutive-swap neighbour generator is expected to perform better than the arbitrary-swap one, even though the latter could provide a somewhat shorter path to the optimum (with n-1 swaps, instead of n(n-1)/2).

A more precise statement of the heuristic is that one should try first candidate states s' for which P(E(s), E(s'), T) is large. For the "standard" acceptance function P above, it means that E(s') - E(s) is on the order of T or less. Thus, in the traveling salesman example above, one could use a neighbour() function that swaps two random cities, where the probability of choosing a city pair vanishes as their distance increases beyond T.

Barrier avoidance

When choosing the candidate generator neighbour() one must also try to reduce the number of "deep" local minima — states (or sets of connected states) that have much lower energy than all its neighbouring states. Such "closed catchment basins" of the energy function may trap the SA algorithm with high probability (roughly proportional to the number of states in the basin) and for a very long time (roughly exponential on the energy difference between the surrounding states and the bottom of the basin).

As a rule, it is impossible to design a candidate generator that will satisfy this goal and also prioritize candidates with similar energy. On the other hand, one can often vastly improve the efficiency of SA by relatively simple changes to the generator. In the traveling salesman problem, for instance, it is not hard to exhibit two tours A, B, with nearly equal lengths, such that (1) A is optimal, (2) every sequence of city-pair swaps that converts A to B goes through tours that are much longer than both, and (3) A can be transformed into B by flipping (reversing the order of) a set of consecutive cities. In this example, A and B lie in different "deep basins" if the generator performs only random pair-swaps; but they will be in the same basin if the generator performs random segment-flips.

Cooling schedule

The physical analogy that is used to justify SA assumes that the cooling rate is low enough for the probability distribution of the current state to be near thermodynamic equilibrium at all times. Unfortunately, the relaxation time—the time one must wait for the equilibrium to be restored after a change in temperature—strongly depends on the "topography" of the energy function and on the current temperature. In the SA algorithm, the relaxation time also depends on the candidate generator, in a very complicated way. Note that all these parameters are usually provided as black box functions to the SA algorithm. Therefore, the ideal cooling rate cannot be determined beforehand, and should be empirically adjusted for each problem. Adaptive simulated annealing algorithms address this problem by connecting the cooling schedule to the search progress.

Restarts

Sometimes it is better to move back to a solution that was significantly better rather than always moving from the current state. This process is called restarting of simulated annealing. To do this we set s and e to sbest and ebest and perhaps restart the annealing schedule. The decision to restart could be based on several criteria. Notable among these include restarting based on a fixed number of steps, based on whether the current energy is too high compared to the best energy obtained so far, restarting randomly, etc.

Related methods

See also

References

  1. Kirkpatrick, S.; Gelatt Jr, C. D.; Vecchi, M. P. (1983). "Optimization by Simulated Annealing". Science 220 (4598): 671–680. Bibcode:1983Sci...220..671K. doi:10.1126/science.220.4598.671. JSTOR 1690046. PMID 17813860.
  2. Černý, V. (1985). "Thermodynamical approach to the traveling salesman problem: An efficient simulation algorithm". Journal of Optimization Theory and Applications 45: 41–51. doi:10.1007/BF00940812.
  3. Metropolis, Nicholas; Rosenbluth, Arianna W.; Rosenbluth, Marshall N.; Teller, Augusta H.; Teller, Edward (1953). "Equation of State Calculations by Fast Computing Machines". The Journal of Chemical Physics 21 (6): 1087. Bibcode:1953JChPh..21.1087M. doi:10.1063/1.1699114.
  4. Granville, V.; Krivanek, M.; Rasson, J.-P. (1994). "Simulated annealing: A proof of convergence". IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence 16 (6): 652–656. doi:10.1109/34.295910.
  5. "Sequential Monte Carlo samplers - P. Del Moral - A. Doucet - A. Jasra - 2006 - Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series B (Statistical Methodology) - Wiley Online Library". onlinelibrary.wiley.com. Retrieved 2015-06-11.

Further reading

External links

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