A gallery of up-to-date and stylish LaTeX templates, examples to help you learn LaTeX, and papers and presentations published by our community. Search or browse below.
Although individual ants have an extremely basic intelligence, and are completely incapable of surviving on their own, colonies of ants can develop remarkably sophisticated and biologically successful behavior. This paper discusses a set of experiments which attempt to simulate one of these behaviors, namely the ability of ants to place pheromones as a way of communication. These experiments involved a variety of different environments, and tested two varieties of the genetic algorithm NEAT: the standard offline version, and its online counterpart rtNEAT. Since the experimental environment did not seem to offer any benefit to continuous learning, we had expected NEAT and rtNEAT to have roughly similar learning curves. However, our results directly contradict this hypothesis, showing much more succesful learning with rtNEAT than with standard NEAT.
This is an example document for the achemso document class, intended for submissions to the American Chemical Society for publication.
For more information on preparing your manuscript for submission to ACS Publications, please see their resource center.
Edward Tufte is a pioneer in the field of data visualization, and his works inspired the creation of two LaTeX classes for books and handouts.
Here we present the excellent sample handout produced by the The Tufte-LaTeX Developers pre-loaded into Overleaf (formerly writeLaTeX) for you to use as a starting point for your own work.
Simply click on the button above to use Overleaf to create and edit your handout - there's nothing to install and no sign up required. When you're finished, why not use our integrated publish to figshare option to publish your work freely online.
Click here if you'd like to try the corresponding Tufte book design on Overleaf.
PS: If you're new to LaTeX, our free online LaTeX course covers all the steps you need to get you started.
This is a modified dark-colored version of the unofficial Lehigh University LaTeX template. The original 4:3 template was made by Alex Pacheco. The color palette follows the latest Lehigh University branding and visual identity guide. This template is NOT endorsed by anyone at Lehigh
Guanyang Xue
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