Lynsay Sands was born in Canada and is an award-winning author of over thirty books, which have made the Barnes & Noble and NEW YORK TIMES bestseller lists. She is best known for her Argeneau series, about a modern-day family of vampires.
Genetic Programming IV: Routine Human-Competitive Machine Intelligence, demonstrates the everyday solution of such holy grail' problems as the automatic synthesis of analog circuits, the design of automatic controllers, and the automated programming of computers. To specialists in any of the fields covered by this book's sample problem areas, I say read this book and discover the computer-augmented inventions that are your destiny. To remaining skeptics who doubt the inventive competence of genetics and evolution, I say read this book and change your mind or risk the strong possibility that your doubts will soon cause you significant intellectual embarrassment.' David E. Goldberg, University of Illinois The research reported in this book is a tour de force. For the first time since the idea was bandied about in the 1940s and the early 1950s, we have a set of examples of human-competitive automatic programming.' John H. Holland, University of Michigan John Koza and his colleagues have done remarkable work in advancing the development of genetic programming and applying this to practical problems such as electric circuit design and control system design. I strongly recommend it.' Bernard Widrow, Electrical Engineering Dept., Stanford University John Koza's genetic programming approach tomachine discovery can invent solutions to more complex specifications than any other I have seen.' John McCarthy, Computer Science Dept., Stanford University