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Quarterly (Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall)
128 pp. per issue
7 x 10, illustrated
Founded: 1993
ISSN 1064-5462
E-ISSN 1530-9185
2010 Impact Factor: 2.122
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Spring 2006, Vol. 12, No. 2, Pages 199-202
Posted Online May 18, 2006.
(doi:10.1162/artl.2006.12.2.199)
© 2006 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Visualizing Coevolution with CIAO PlotsDave Cliff*Foreign Exchange Complex Risk Group Deutsche Bank AG London EC2N 2DB, UK dave.cliff@bcs.org Geoffrey F. MillerDepartment of Psychology University of New Mexico Albuquerque, NM 87131 gfmiller@unm.edu
Abstract In a previous article, we introduced a number of visualization techniques that we had developed for monitoring the dynamics of artificial competitive coevolutionary systems. One of these techniques involves evaluating the performance of an individual from the current population in a series of trials against opponents from all previous generations, and visualizing the results as a 2D grid of shaded cells or pixels: qualitative patterns in the shading can indicate different classes of coevolutionary dynamics. As this technique involves pitting a current individual against ancestral opponents, we referred to the visualizations as CIAO plots. Since then, a number of other authors studying the dynamics of competitive coevolutionary systems have used CIAO plots or close derivatives to help illuminate the dynamics of their systems, and it has become something of a de facto standard visualization technique. In this very brief article we summarize the rationale for CIAO plots, explain the method of constructing a CIAO plot, and review important recent results that identify significant limitations of this technique.
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