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2004 NASA/DoD Conference on Evolvable Hardware (EH'04)
Design Space Issues for Intrinsic Evolvable Hardware
Seattle, Washington, USA
June 24-June 26
ISBN: 0-7695-2145-2
James Hereford, Murray State University, KY
David Gwaltney, NASA-Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL
This paper discusses the problem of increased programming time for intrinsic evolvable hardware (EHW) as the complexity of the circuit grows. We develop equations for the size of the population, n, and the number of generations required for the population to converge, ngen, based on L, the length of the programming string. We show that the processing time of the computer becomes negligible for intrinsic EHW since the selection/crossover/mutation steps are only done once per generation, suggesting there is room for use of more complex evolutionary algorithms in intrinsic EHW. Finally, we review the state of the practice and discuss the notion of a system design approach for intrinsic EHW.
Citation:
James Hereford, David Gwaltney, "Design Space Issues for Intrinsic Evolvable Hardware," eh, pp.231, 2004 NASA/DoD Conference on Evolvable Hardware (EH'04), 2004
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