Publication

When and why metaheuristics researchers can ignore “No Free Lunch” theorems

McDermott, James
Citation
McDermott, James. (2019). When and why metaheuristics researchers can ignore “No Free Lunch” theorems. Metaheuristics. doi: 10.1007/s42257-019-00002-6
Abstract
The No Free Lunch (NFL) theorem for search and optimisation states that averaged across all possible objective functions on a fixed search space, all search algorithms perform equally well. Several refined versions of the theorem find a similar outcome when averaging across smaller sets of functions. This paper argues that NFL results continue to be misunderstood by many researchers, and addresses this issue in several ways. Existing arguments against real-world implications of NFL results are collected and re-stated for accessibility and new ones are added. Specific misunderstandings extant in the literature are identified, with speculation as to how they may have arisen. This paper presents an argument against a common paraphrase of NFL findings—that algorithms must be specialised to problem domains to do well—after problematising the usually undefined term “domain”. It provides novel concrete counter-examples illustrating cases where NFL theorems do not apply. In conclusion, it offers a novel view of the real meaning of NFL, incorporating the anthropic principle and justifying the position that in many common situations researchers can ignore NFL.
Funder
Publisher
Springer
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s42257-019-00002-6
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland