• DocumentCode
    2196357
  • Title

    Self-reproduction in asynchronous cellular automata

  • Author

    Nehaniv, Chrystopher L.

  • Author_Institution
    Fac. of Eng. & Inf. Sci., Hertfordshire Univ., Hatfield, UK
  • fYear
    2002
  • fDate
    2002
  • Firstpage
    201
  • Lastpage
    209
  • Abstract
    Building on the work of Von Neumann, Burks, Codd, and Langton, among others, we introduce the first examples of asynchronous self-reproduction in cellular automata. Reliance on a global synchronous update signal has been a limitation of all solutions since the problem of achieving self-production in cellular automata was first attacked by Von Neumann half a century ago. Our results obviate the need for this restriction. We introduce a simple constructive mechanism to transform any cellular automata network with synchronous update into one with the same behavior but whose cells may be updated randomly and asynchronously. This is achieved by introduction of a synchronization substratum which locally keeps track of the passage of time in a local neighborhood in a manner that keeps all cells locally in-step. The generality of this mechanism is guaranteed by a general mathematical theorem (due to the author) that allows any synchronous cellular automata configuration and rule to be realized asynchronously in such a way the the behavior of the original synchronous cellular automata can be recovered from that of the corresponding asynchronous cellular automaton. Thus all important results on self-reproduction, universal computation, and universal construction, and evolution in populations of self-reproducing configurations in cellular automata that have been obtained in the past carry over to the asynchronous domain.
  • Keywords
    artificial life; cellular automata; asynchronous cellular automata; asynchronous self reproduction; global synchronous update signal; local neighborhood; mathematical theorem; self-reproduction; Adaptive systems; Automata; Biological materials; DNA; Environmental economics; Evolution (biology); Genetics; Hardware; NASA; World Wide Web;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Evolvable Hardware, 2002. Proceedings. NASA/DoD Conference on
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-1718-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/EH.2002.1029886
  • Filename
    1029886