IEEE Congress on Evolutionary Computation 2010
DOI: 10.1109/cec.2010.5586188
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Tracking the Red Queen effect by estimating features of competitive co-evolutionary fitness landscapes

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Competitive coevolution can be viewed as an arms race, that is, individuals in the populations compete among themselves. One group attempts to take advantage over another, which responds with an adaptive strategy to recover the advantage (Katada & Handa, 2010). A biological example is the predator-prey competitive coevolution, in which the evolution of one population affects the evolution of the other.…”
Section: Coevolutionary Algorithmsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Competitive coevolution can be viewed as an arms race, that is, individuals in the populations compete among themselves. One group attempts to take advantage over another, which responds with an adaptive strategy to recover the advantage (Katada & Handa, 2010). A biological example is the predator-prey competitive coevolution, in which the evolution of one population affects the evolution of the other.…”
Section: Coevolutionary Algorithmsmentioning
confidence: 99%