How to Set Up a Genetic Algorithm to Minimize Goodness of Fit

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CJ
CJ el 7 de Abr. de 2016
Comentada: CJ el 7 de Abr. de 2016
I would like to use the genetic algorithm functionality to minimize the error between two sets of data, and determine the best values for two coefficients. The following is my code:
% Set initial paramters.
Cl_initial=3;
R=0.5;
u=0.5;
T=40;
t=[68.92 109.97 287.22 116.95 171.89 90.3 103.54];
Nt = length(t);
Clt = zeros(1,Nt);
THM = zeros(1, Nt);
result = zeros(2, Nt);
% Solve for Chlorine residual.
for i = 1:Nt
Clt(i) = [Cl_initial*(1-R)/(1-R*exp(-u*t(i)))];
end
% Solve for THM formation.
NClt = length(Clt);
for j = 1:NClt
THM(j) = T*(Cl_initial-Clt(j));
end
%Combine into single matrix.
result = [Clt; THM];
%Calculate mean square error between results and solution.
solution=[0.7075 0.9133 0.7125 0.86 0.7375 0.8225 0.984;
16.4 24.7 27.4 22.7 27.2 20.6 22.9];
cost_func = 'MSE';
fit = goodnessOfFit(result, solution, cost_func);
I need to minimize "fit" while varying the coefficients of "R" and "u" to find the best values for those two coefficients. I also know that R and u have to be between 0 and 1.
I am a little overwhelmed as to where to start. Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks.
  2 comentarios
Brendan Hamm
Brendan Hamm el 7 de Abr. de 2016
Why would you think that you would need a Genetic Algorithm here?
This could be solved with basic Optimization Toolbox solvers like fmincon or lsqcurvefit .
CJ
CJ el 7 de Abr. de 2016
Yes, you are correct. I was thinking I could use the ga function in preparation for something later, but it is much easier to use fmincon. Thanks.

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