Examinando por Materia "Evolutionary"
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Ítem Multiobjective model for multicast overlay networks over IP/MPLS using MOEA(2008-01-01) Montoya, J.; Donoso, Y.; Montoya, E.; Echeverri, D.; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ingeniería de Sistemas; I+D+I en Tecnologías de la Información y las ComunicacionesMulticast plays an important role in supporting a new generation of applications. At present and for different reasons, technical and non-technical, multicast IP hasn't yet been totally adopted for Internet. During recent years, an active area of research is that of implementing this kind of traffic in the application layer where the multicast functionality isnt a responsibility of the routers but that of the hosts, which we know as Multicast Overlay Networks (MON). In this article, routing in an MON is put forward as a multiobjective optimization problem (MOP) where two functions are optimized: 1) the total end to end delay of the multicast tree and 2) the maximum link utilization. The simultaneous optimization of these two functions is an NP-Complete problem and to solve this we suggest using Multiobjective Evolutionary Algorithms (MOEA), specifically NSGA-II.Ítem A REVISION OF THE DIDELPHID MARSUPIAL GENUS MARMOSA PART 2. SPECIES OF THE RAPPOSA GROUP (SUBGENUS MICOUREUS)(AMER MUSEUM NATURAL HISTORY, 2020-06-01) Voss, Robert S.; Giarla, Thomas C.; Diaz-Nieto, Juan F.; Jansa, Sharon A.; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ciencias; Biodiversidad, Evolución y ConservaciónIn this report, the second of a revisionary series on mouse opossums (Marmosa), we analyze cytochrome b sequence data from 166 specimens of the subgenus Micoureus and delimit putative species using the multirate Poisson Tree Processes (mPTP) method. That analysis identifies 21 putative species, many of which can be matched with available names, including alstoni, constantiae, demerarae, limae, germana, meridae, paraguayana, parda, perplexa, phaea, rapposa, and rutteri. However, some of these nominal taxa are not morphologically diagnosable, and in the absence of other corroborating evidence, we do not recommend that they all be recognized as valid. Phylogenetic analyses of a multigene dataset suggest that putative species of Micoureus belong to several wellsupported clades, one of which (the ``Rapposa Group'') is revised in this report. As defined herein, the Rapposa Group includes at least three valid species: M. rapposa Thomas, 1899 (including budini Thomas, 1920); M. parda Tate, 1931; and M. rutteri Thomas, 1924. Herein we document their ecogeographic distributions and diagnostic traits, comment on their taxonomic histories, and list the specimens we examined (including all relevant type material).