Title: G5AIAI%20Introduction%20to%20AI
1G5AIAIIntroduction to AI
Combinatorial Explosion
Graham Kendall GXK_at_CS.NOTT.AC.UK www.cs.nott.ac.uk
/gxk 44 (0) 115 846 6514
2The Travelling Salesman Problem
- A salesperson has to visit a number of cities
- (S)He can start at any city and must finish at
that same city - The salesperson must visit each city only once
- The number of possible routes is (n!)/2 (where n
is the number of cities)
3Combinatorial Explosion
4Combinatorial Explosion
5Combinatorial Explosion
A 10 city TSP has 181,000 possible solutions A 20
city TSP has 10,000,000,000,000,000 possible
solutions A 50 City TSP has 100,000,000,000,000,00
0,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,
000,000,000 possible solutions
There are 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 litres of
water on the planet
Mchalewicz, Z, Evolutionary Algorithms for
Constrained Optimization Problems, CEC 2000
(Tutorial)
6Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
7Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
8Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
9Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
10Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
11Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
12Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
13Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
14Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
- How many moves does it take to move four rings?
- You might like to try writing a towers of hanoi
program (and you may well have to in one of your
courses!)
15Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
- If you are interested in an algorithm here is a
very simple one - Assume the pegs are arranged in a circle
- 1. Do the following until 1.2 cannot be done
- 1.1 Move the smallest ring to the peg residing
next to it, in clockwise order - 1.2 Make the only legal move that does not
involve the smallest ring - 2. Stop
- P. Buneman and L.Levy (1980). The Towers of Hanoi
Problem, Information Processing Letters, 10, 243-4
16Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
- A time analysis of the problem shows that the
lower bound for the number of moves is - 2N-1
- Since N appears as the exponent we have an
exponential function
17Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
18Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
- The original problem was stated that a group of
tibetan monks had to move 64 gold rings which
were placed on diamond pegs. - When they finished this task the world would end.
- Assume they could move one ring every second (or
more realistically every five seconds). - How long till the end of the world?
19Combinatorial Explosion - Towers of Hanoi
- gt 500,000 years!!!!! Or 3 Trillion years
- Using a computer we could do many more moves than
one a second so go and try implementing the 64
rings towers of hanoi problem. - If you are still alive at the end, try 1,000
rings!!!!
20Combinatorial Explosion - Optimization
- Optimize f(x1, x2,, x100)
- where f is complex and xi is 0 or 1
- The size of the search space is 2100 ? 1030
- An exhaustive search is not an option
- At 1000 evaluations per second
- Start the algorithm at the time the universe was
created - As of now we would have considered 1 of all
possible solutions
21Combinatorial Explosion
22Combinatorial Explosion
Running on a computer capable of 1 million
instructions/second
Ref Harel, D. 2000. Computer Ltd. What they
really cant do, Oxford University Press
23G5AIAIIntroduction to AI
End Combinatorial Explosion