Lyle Regenwetter, Cyril Picard, Amin Heyrani Nobari, Akash Srivastava, Faez Ahmed
The field of engineering is shaped by the tools and methods used to solve problems. Optimization is one such class of powerful, robust, and effective engineering tools proven over decades of use. Within just a few years, generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) has risen as another promising tool for general-purpose problem-solving. While optimization shines at precisely identifying highly-optimal solutions, GenAI excels at inferring problem requirements, bridging solution domains, handling mixed data modalities, and rapidly generating copious numbers of solutions. These differing attributes also make the two frameworks complementary. Hybrid `generative optimization' algorithms have gained traction across a few engineering applications and now comprise an emerging paradigm for engineering problem-solving. We expect significant developments in the near future around generative optimization, leading to changes in how engineers solve problems using computational tools. We offer our perspective on existing methods, areas of promise, and key research questions.
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