Steve,
Do these models have adaptation? Most models of this type that I have been exposed to have evolution and natural selection but not ADAPTATION. Just being annoying, Nick Nicholas S. Thompson Professor of Psychology and Ethology Clark University [hidden email] http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/ [hidden email] > > > Today's Topics: > > 1. Darwin@Home (Stephen Guerin) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Message: 1 > Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2005 00:27:13 -0700 > From: "Stephen Guerin" <[hidden email]> > Subject: [FRIAM] Darwin@Home > To: "Friam" <[hidden email]> > Message-ID: <[hidden email]> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" > > Biota.org is back up and promoting Darwin@Home. > http://www.darwinathome.org/mission/index.html > > Some familiar Alife applications are adapting to it: > > - Fluidium: Gerald De Jong's "tensegrity" structures. Nice example of > and webstart > I believe Owen passed around a link 6 months ago: > http://fluidiom.sourceforge.net/ > > - SodaBot -> SodaRace > > - Larry Yaeger's PolyWorld > > - More at: http://www.darwinathome.org/teams/index.html > > -Steve > > ________________________________________________________ > [hidden email] http://www.redfish.com > office: (505)995-0206 624 Agua Fria Street > mobile: (505)577-5828 Santa Fe, NM 87501 > > > > > ------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > Friam mailing list > [hidden email] > http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com > > > End of Friam Digest, Vol 19, Issue 10 > ************************************* |
Nick writes:
> Do these models have adaptation? Most models of this type that I have > been exposed to have evolution and natural selection but not > ADAPTATION. Hmm, you may define "adaptation" in a more rigorous way than I. I consider natural selection to be a form of adaptation. Learning during an agent's lifetime is another form of adaptation. And, manipulation of the environment, as in the indirect communication via pheromone fields in ant foraging, to be a third form of adaptation for an agent system. As a generality, I'd say most Alife models primary mechanism of adaptation is natural or artificial selection. However, Larry Yaeger's Polyworld, which is one of the models on the link, does include non-hereditary adaptation through Hebbian learning. From his paper (http://www.beanblossom.in.us/larryy/Yaeger.ALife3.pdf): "PolyWorld brings together biologically motivated genetics, simple simulated physiologies and metabolisms, Hebbian learning in arbitrary neural network architectures, a visual perceptive mechanism, and a suite of primitive behaviors in artificial organisms grounded in an ecology just complex enough to foster speciation and inter-species competition. Predation, mimicry, sexual reproduction, and even communication are all supported in a straightforward fashion. The resulting survival strategies, both individual and group, are purely emergent, as are the functionalities embodied in their neural network "brains". Complex behaviors resulting from the simulated neural activity are unpredictable, and change as natural selection acts over multiple generations." Your point is interesting. I guess what constitutes an Alife model is rather fuzzy. In the late 80s and early 90s I'd say ~70% of Alife models had GA/GP mechanisms as central components. That said, tangentially related models like flocking, ant foraging models and machine learning models were also included in the conferences. Since the mid-90s, I think the meaning of what constitutes a living system to the Alife community has pushed out from a naive application of neo-darwinist mechanism. Some would argue for the necessary presence of generalized thermodynamic work-cycles for an Alife system to be considered "alive". "Some" being me with a mouse in my pocket ;-) -S ________________________________________________________ [hidden email] http://www.redfish.com office: (505)995-0206 624 Agua Fria Street mobile: (505)577-5828 Santa Fe, NM 87501 > -----Original Message----- > From: Nicholas Thompson [mailto:[hidden email]] > Sent: Monday, January 10, 2005 11:25 AM > To: [hidden email] > Subject: [FRIAM] RE: Friam Digest, Vol 19, Issue 10 > > > Steve, > > > Just being annoying, > > Nick > > Nicholas S. Thompson > Professor of Psychology and Ethology > Clark University > [hidden email] > http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/ > [hidden email] > > > > > > > > Today's Topics: > > > > 1. Darwin@Home (Stephen Guerin) > > > > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > > > Message: 1 > > Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2005 00:27:13 -0700 > > From: "Stephen Guerin" <[hidden email]> > > Subject: [FRIAM] Darwin@Home > > To: "Friam" <[hidden email]> > > Message-ID: <[hidden email]> > > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" > > > > Biota.org is back up and promoting Darwin@Home. > > http://www.darwinathome.org/mission/index.html > > > > Some familiar Alife applications are adapting to it: > > > > - Fluidium: Gerald De Jong's "tensegrity" structures. Nice example of > JOGL > > and webstart > > I believe Owen passed around a link 6 months ago: > > http://fluidiom.sourceforge.net/ > > > > - SodaBot -> SodaRace > > > > - Larry Yaeger's PolyWorld > > > > - More at: http://www.darwinathome.org/teams/index.html > > > > -Steve > > > > ________________________________________________________ > > [hidden email] http://www.redfish.com > > office: (505)995-0206 624 Agua Fria Street > > mobile: (505)577-5828 Santa Fe, NM 87501 > > > > > > > > > > ------------------------------ > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Friam mailing list > > [hidden email] > > http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com > > > > > > End of Friam Digest, Vol 19, Issue 10 > > ************************************* > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9AM @ Jane's Cafe > Lecture schedule, archives, unsubscribe, etc.: > http://www.friam.org > > |
Nick wrote:
>>>>Do these models have adaptation? Most models of this type that I have >>>>been exposed to have evolution and natural selection but not >>>>ADAPTATION. >>> I'm not sure that such models can be said to "have" adaptation. "Adaptation" as a term may be getting overloaded in the same way "Agent" has over the last few years. Maybe someday soon somebody will write an article "Agents Considered Harmful". Heh. Anyhow. I have a different idea of what adaptation might usefully mean, I don't think many ALife models fit that definition, and I think we might make some interesting kinds of progress in applied and theoretical complexity if we consider things from a non-agent-centric perspective. I am slowly coming around to the idea that the neglected notion in complexity modeling is the way in which a model (lets call it a phenotype) is co-produced by some bag of genes and some sufficiently interesting environment. So the idea of "adaptation" for me is more the process of "situating" some GRN with respect to some world dynamics. For many ALife models I've seen, a 1:1 mapping between some fixed sequence or network of genes and the phenotype traits is assumed. All the action occurs out in the world after the phenotype springs fully grown from the forehead of Zeus. These models are thus not "adaptive" in my sense of the term. There is some sense that the population of such agents adapts over time, though the notion that said population somehow is itself a phenotype is less than satisfying in a way that I am still having some difficulty articulating. I've been a fan of the thermodynamic-work-cycles-centric idea for awhile, but I still don't see from a modeling standpoint any mechanism stated so far for choosing WHICH gradients to pick out of the genetic/environmental soups. I suspect that the venue to think about these things is Artificial Epigenesis (AE). I am hopeful that this is where we can gain some traction in composition, karyotypic plasticity, and validation and verification issues. It is also one road towards some interesting social applications. By contrast, Polyworld seems to have begged all of the (for me) interesting questions. There. Complexity might not necessarily have much to do with what we could almost call classical notions of agents, adaptation and artificial life. It could have a lot to do with the thermodynamics ideas we've been discussing in a new way that we haven't played with much yet. And I didn't even talk about Category Theory. Oops. Carl Stephen Guerin wrote: > Nick writes: > >>Do these models have adaptation? Most models of this type that I have >>been exposed to have evolution and natural selection but not >>ADAPTATION. > > > Hmm, you may define "adaptation" in a more rigorous way than I. > > I consider natural selection to be a form of adaptation. Learning during an > agent's lifetime is another form of adaptation. And, manipulation of the > environment, as in the indirect communication via pheromone fields in ant > foraging, to be a third form of adaptation for an agent system. > > As a generality, I'd say most Alife models primary mechanism of adaptation > is natural or artificial selection. > > However, Larry Yaeger's Polyworld, which is one of the models on the link, > does include non-hereditary adaptation through Hebbian learning. From his > paper (http://www.beanblossom.in.us/larryy/Yaeger.ALife3.pdf): > > "PolyWorld brings together biologically motivated > genetics, simple simulated physiologies and metabolisms, Hebbian learning in > arbitrary neural network > architectures, a visual perceptive mechanism, and a suite of primitive > behaviors in artificial organisms > grounded in an ecology just complex enough to foster speciation and > inter-species competition. > Predation, mimicry, sexual reproduction, and even communication are all > supported in a > straightforward fashion. The resulting survival strategies, both individual > and group, are purely > emergent, as are the functionalities embodied in their neural network > "brains". Complex behaviors > resulting from the simulated neural activity are unpredictable, and change > as natural selection acts over > multiple generations." > > Your point is interesting. I guess what constitutes an Alife model is rather > fuzzy. In the late 80s and early 90s I'd say ~70% of Alife models had GA/GP > mechanisms as central components. That said, tangentially related models > like flocking, ant foraging models and machine learning models were also > included in the conferences. Since the mid-90s, I think the meaning of what > constitutes a living system to the Alife community has pushed out from a > naive application of neo-darwinist mechanism. Some would argue for the > necessary presence of generalized thermodynamic work-cycles for an Alife > system to be considered "alive". "Some" being me with a mouse in my pocket > ;-) > > -S > ________________________________________________________ > [hidden email] http://www.redfish.com > office: (505)995-0206 624 Agua Fria Street > mobile: (505)577-5828 Santa Fe, NM 87501 > > |
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