Title :
Organization-oriented chemical programming for the organic design of distributed computing systems
Author :
Matsumaru, Naoki ; Dittrich, Peter
Author_Institution :
Bio Syst. Anal. Group, Friedrich-Schiller-Univ., Jena
Abstract :
Biochemical information processing found in nature is known to be robust, self-organizing, adaptive, decentralized, asynchronous, fault-tolerant, and evolvable. A couple of approaches are already using the chemical metaphor, such as, Gamma, MGS, amorphous computing, membrane computing, and reaction-diffusion processors. However, in accordance with Conrad\´s tradeoff principle, programming a chemical computer appears to be difficult. Therefore, in order to further exploit the mentioned properties new programming techniques are required. Here we describe how chemical organization theory can serve as a tool for chemical programming. The theory allows to predict the potential behavior of a chemical program and thus supports a programmer in the design of a chemical-like control system. The approach is demonstrated by applying it to the maximal independent set problem. We show that the desired solutions are predicted by the theory as chemical organizations. Furthermore the theory uncovers "undesirable" organizations, representing uncompleted halting computations due to insufficient amount of molecules. Finally we discuss an architecture for a "chemical virtual machine"
Keywords :
distributed processing; biochemical information processing; chemical virtual machine; chemical-like control system; distributed computing systems; organic design; organization-oriented chemical programming; Amorphous materials; Biomembranes; Chemical processes; Control systems; Distributed computing; Fault tolerance; Information processing; Organic chemicals; Programming profession; Robustness;
Conference_Titel :
Bio-Inspired Models of Network, Information and Computing Systems, 2006. 1st
Conference_Location :
Madonna di Campiglio
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0538-6
Electronic_ISBN :
1-4244-0539-4
DOI :
10.1109/BIMNICS.2006.361802