Artificial life
Artificial life, also known as Alife is currently the study of life through the use of human-made analogs of living creatures. If these experiments are successful, then the term will refer to human-made (or otherwise artificial[?]) lifeforms.
Alife researchers are divided into two main groups:
The field is a meeting point for people from many other more traditional fields, notably: linguistics, physics, mathematics, philosophy, computer science, biology... The field is particularly well defined by the tools it uses, which include evolutionary algorithms (EA), genetic algorithms (GA), genetic programming (GP), artificial chemistries[?] (AC), agent based models[?], and cellular automata (CA). Of interest has also been the application of co-evolution to Lindenmayer systems. Related fields and other subfields include:
Open problems:
This fascinating field has received both positive and negative remarks: "practical theology," "the science with no facts," etc.
External links
wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump |
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