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         Artificial Life:     more books (100)
  1. Artificial Life VII: Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Artificial Life (Complex Adaptive Systems) by Mark Bedau, John McCaskill, et all 2000-07-31
  2. Artificial Life X: Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on the Simulation and Synthesis of Living Systems (Bradford Books)
  3. The Logic Of Artificial Life: Abstracting And Synthesizing The Principles Of Living Systems: Proceedings Of The 6th German Workshop On Artificial Life April 14-16, 2004, Bamberg Ge by German Workshop on Artificial Life 2004, Harald Schaub, et all 2004-11-15
  4. Artificial Life and Evolutionary Computation: Proceedings of Wivace 2008
  5. Advances in Artificial Life: 8th European Conference, ECAL 2005, Canterbury, UK, September 5-9, 2005, Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science / Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence)
  6. Artificial Life Playhouse: Evolution at Your Fingertips/Book and Disk by Stephen Prata, 1993-03
  7. Genesis Redux: Experiments Creating Artificial Life/Book and Disk by Edward Rietman, 1993-12
  8. Artificial Life VIII: Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Artificial Life (Complex Adaptive Systems)
  9. Advances in Artificial Life: Third European Conference on Artificial Life, Granada, Spain, June 4 - 6, 1995 Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science / Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence)
  10. Advances in Artificial Life: 6th European Conference, ECAL 2001, Prague, Czech Republic, September 10-14, 2001. Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer ... / Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence)
  11. Creating Artificial Life: Self-Organization/Book and Disk by Edward Rietman, 1993-02
  12. Advances in Artificial Life: 9th European Conference, ECAL 2007, Lisbon, Portugal, September 10-14, 2007, Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science) ... / Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence)
  13. Artificial Life Lab/Book and Disk by Rudy V. B. Rucker, 1993-12
  14. Recent Advances in Artificial Life: Sydney, Australia 5 - 8 December 2005 (Advances in Natural Computation)

41. Claus Emmeche Home Page
Home page of a theoretical biologist with general interests in Philosophy of Nature, Philosophy of Science, and Science Studies, and research interests in artificial life and theoretical biology. Links to online papers, other resources, and to the Center for the Philosophy of Nature and Science Studies.
http://www.nbi.dk/~emmeche/
Claus Emmeche Theoretical biologist, associate professor, head of the Center for the Philosophy of Nature and Science Studies at the Faculty of Science ( CPNSS , hosted by the Niels Bohr Institute), University of Copenhagen. Danish Homepage here Address:
CPNSS, Niels Bohr Institute, Blegdamsvej 17, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
Email address ( here ). Phone: +45 35 32 53 47 Fax: +45 35 32 50 16. Web: http://www.nbi.dk/~emmeche/ Research interests (and a few related links):

42. Mind Uploading Home Page
Explains the possibilities and realities of transferring a person's mind into an artificial life form.
http://www.ibiblio.org/jstrout/uploading/
Welcome to the
Mind Uploading Home Page
Robots shall inherit the Earth; and they shall be Us... The Mind Uploading home page is dedicated to the putative future process of copying one's mind from the natural substrate of the brain into an artificial one, manufactured by humans. This technology will radically alter society in many ways, as science fiction authors have begun to illustrate. Through this server, explore the science behind the science fiction!
  • Technology
  • Assumption of Materialism
  • Handy Neuroscience Facts
  • Proposed Uploading Procedures
  • Timelines
  • Directions for Research ...
  • Hardware for Uploading
  • Philosophy
  • What Is Life?
  • What Is a Person?
  • Personal Identity: the Central Issue
  • Policy
  • Duplication
  • Artificial Realities (Policy)
  • Effects
  • Life After Uploading
  • Ecology
  • Brain Enhancements
  • 43. Artificial Life - An Introduction
    artificial life Stewart Dean's guide to Alife and its clear solutionsto the meaning of life. artificial life - an Introduction.
    http://www.webslave.dircon.co.uk/alife/intro.html
    Artificial Life - an Introduction.
    Artificial Life is a the name for a collection of various disciplines. It is about the study of non organic organisms, of life like behaviour beyond the creation of nature. In the quest of behavioural biologists to understand the behaviours of nature and computer scientists to create new and better programs, paths increasingly crossed. Research of different kinds can, in many cases, lead to unifying knowledge. Later on I will be looking at some of the people involved with artificial life and the work they have done. Artificial Life, increasingly called aLife by its disciples, is about the emergent properties . An emergent property is created when something becomes more than the sum of its parts. The most extreme example of an emergent property we know of is life on this planet. We are morethan the sum of our parts. Half a human does not work without the other half, but as a whole we are capable of very complex behaviour. Artificial Life is an attempt to explain existing life as well as creating something new. It should not be confused with Artificial Intelligence ; the two fields have only a few topics in common.

    44. New Scientist | AI And A-Life | Introduction
    A authoritative guide to the topics from the UK science magazine.Category Computers artificial life...... Researchers in artificial intelligence (AI) and artificial life (ALife) maketheir living by modelling, copying or adapting systems from biology.
    http://www.newscientist.com/hottopics/ai/
    AI AND A-LIFE
    New wave AI

    Traditional AI

    Neural networks
    ...
    Intelligent agents

    ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND A-LIFE Robot face smiles and sneers K-bot has a full repertoire of facial expressions, say her creators - she could help scientists researching artificial intelligence Software gambler takes on the tipsters The intelligent program outperforms the best human tipsters for Australian Rugby League - it could easily be adapted for other sports WELCOME TO THE UNIVERSE of humanoid robots, intelligent insects and virtual creatures designed to fly real planes...
    Researchers in artificial intelligence (AI) and artificial life (A-Life) make their living by modelling, copying or adapting systems from biology. The combination of human ingenuity and the explosion in computer power has created a host of creations that take as their starting point anything from human intelligence and emotions to genetic inheritance and evolution.
    "Traditional" AI grew out of efforts to crack enemy codes in the Second World War. It aimed to capture human intelligence by following vast lists of rules programmed into a computer. Today, this approach is best known for creating Deep Blue, the computer that beat the chess world champion Garry Kasparov in 1997.
    But this strategy has serious limitations because it seems unlikely to produce anything that really resembles human intelligence. Instead, a new wave of AI is slowly making its mark. It relies to a large extent on coaxing complex behaviours from the interaction of simple components. So, for example, networks of artificial brain cells can learn and recognise patterns. Already such neural networks are advising financial wizards about investing their money and helping doctors to diagnose cancer.

    45. SFI Home Page
    Private, nonprofit, multidisciplinary research and education center that pursues emerging science, largely on a theoretical level. Topics include artificial life forms and evolutionary complexity.
    http://www.santafe.edu/
    Home Page
    Santa Fe Institute Quick Search Hot Spots Contact Information - SFI mailing address and main phone numbers as well as directions and transportation information REUs - The Institute's annual summer intern program for undergraduates. CSSS - SFI's annual Complex Systems Summer School. SFI Bulletin - A quarterly publication to inform friends and colleagues of our ongoing work. Working Papers - These technical papers by SFI researchers cover a wide range of topics. Many are available electronically. SFI Bibliography - A growing collection of publications to which SFI research has contributed.
    Santa Fe Institute
    Questions? Email the webmaster
    This Week Events 3/9-15
    Calendar

    March Visitors

    Upcoming Talks
    T he Santa Fe Institute is a private, non-profit, multidisciplinary research and education center, founded in 1984. Since its founding SFI has devoted itself to creating a new kind of scientific research community, pursuing emerging science. Operating as a small, visiting institution, SFI seeks to catalyze new collaborative, multidisciplinary projects that break down the barriers between the traditional disciplines, to spread its ideas and methodologies to other individuals and encourage the practical applications of its results.

    46. Evolutionary Computation And Artificial Life Page
    Evolutionary Computation and artificial life. Welcome. It may also be well arguedthat artificial life and evolutionary computation are very closely related.
    http://www.ai.mit.edu/people/unamay/EC.html
    Evolutionary Computation and Artificial Life
    Welcome
    New Stuff
    New links include
    Introductory Material
    Other Collections of WWW Resources
    Publications, Digests, Movies, Displays, and Journals
    Machine Learning and Distributed AI
    Economics
    Conferences and similar events
    Information Archives
    Assorted (or Unsorted!) Stuff
    Groups
    People
    Current Status of Page
    As of July 1, 1996, Mark Smucker's Evolutionary Computation and Artificial Life page is maintained by me, Una-May O'Reilly. It is slowly evolving towards a new organization which should make downloading faster and retrieval more efficient. Thanks to Mark for establishing this resource. Best of luck to him at his new endeavours in Cambridge.

    47. The New Artificial Life (Alife) Database
    A searchable database of artificial liferelated sites.
    http://www.aridolan.com/ad/adb/adtop.html
    The New Artificial Life (Alife) Database
    A Searchable Database of Alife-Related Sites on the Net, Automatically Gathered by an Intelligent Search Bot. Html Version
    Artificial Life Artificial Life, Alife, Flocking, Emergent Behaviour, AL Cellular Automata Cellular Automata, Game of Life, CA, CA Art Genetic Algorithms Genetic Algorithms, Genetic Programming, Evolutionary Programming, Memetic Algorithms,GA Neural Networks Neural Networks, NN Prisoner's Dilemma Agents Cooperation, Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma, Evolution of Cooperation, Game Theory, IPD Complexity and Self-Organization Complexity, Chaos, Self-Organized Systems, Self Organization L-Systems L-Systems, Lindenmayer Memetics Memetics, Memes, Memetic Algorithms, MA Bots Bots, Search Bots, Intelligent Agents, Software Bots, Software Agents Back to Alife Database Main Page Ariel Dolan
    aridolan@netvision.net.il

    Tel. 972-3-7526264
    Fax. 972-3-5752173

    48. Artificial Life Group
    artificial life Group. Meets to discuss modelling and synthesis of biological systems.Category Computers artificial life Research Groups......The artificial life Group at MIT. Last updated 9/7/99 Participants inthe Group. artificial life on the Net (Hopelessly out of Date).
    http://www.ai.mit.edu/people/cmaley/alife/
    The Artificial Life Group at MIT
    Last updated: 9/7/99 The Artificial Life Group discusses all things pertaining to the modeling and synthesis of biological systems. Meetings are open to all interested parties and consist of research presentations as well as presentation and discussion of relevant journal articles. If you would like to receive emailings about these meetings send requests to Geo Homsy and Erik Rauch , the alife group maintaners, at alife-group-request@ai.mit.edu
    The Current Schedule
    The group has not met recently but we intend to eventually have regular meetings again. Please volunteer to give an informal talk, on either your work or someone else's - send mail to alife-group-request@ai.mit.edu
    Participants in the Group.
    Artificial Life on the Net (Hopelessly out of Date)

    49. Resources : Artificial Life +
    Offering links to many artificial life resources. Categories include people, places, references and tools.
    http://www.cs.ucl.ac.uk/staff/t.quick/alife.html
    Section >> Academic Resources : ALife + Artificial Life + Home Research Autopoiesis Papers ... Misc.Info Subsection >> select? People Places / groups Tools / simulations Links / info nodes ... Reference / biblio People Stuart Kauffman (Complexity)
    Andrew Wuensche
    (Boolean Network dynamics)
    Chris Langton (Cellular Automata, Emergence)
    Barry McMullin
    (modeling Autopoiesis
    Alexander Riegler

    Filippo Menczer
    local information (Evolution and Latent Energy Environments)
    Jari Vaario
    local information (Self-organizing systems)
    Tom Ray
    Tierra
    John Koza
    (GA, GP)
    John Holland (Complexity, Emergence)
    Melanie Mitchell
    Evolving CA computational mechanics James Crutchfield ... Stephanie Forrest (Immunology) Ezequiel Di Paolo (evolution of communication, behavioural coordination) Luc Steels (Robotics, linguistic consensus, coordination) Rodney Brooks local information (Embodied robotics) Inman Harvey EASy COGS Stan Franklin (Agents) Domenico Parisi (Alife @ GRAL Stephano Nolfi (Alife @ GRAL Stephen Wolfram publications (CA) Adrian Thompson (Hardware evolution) Roland Somogyi (Reverse engineering Boolean networks, gene activation networks). Homepage no longer available - gone

    50. Virtual ALife Library
    Online repository of ALife papers.Category Computers artificial life Publications...... Evolving 3D Morphology and Behavior by Competition(ps). artificial life IV conferenceproceedings. artificial life VI proceedings, 1998. Stewart W. Wilson.
    http://www.cs.brandeis.edu/~zippy/alife-library.html
    Last updated 1 Nov 2000. Updated Craig Reynolds' links: boids, SAB94, Alive IV. This is a list of on-line Alife papers. This includes ones on genetic programming, learning, autonomous agents, robotics, and evolution. The sources are divided into three categories: individual authors, institutions, and miscellaneous. Items that go in the institutions category are archives for an entire site or group (SFI, for example). Meta pages and software are listed under Miscellaneous.
    Institutions
    Individuals
    • Vince Darley

    51. GLife
    artificial life simulation for Linux that takes into account terrain, age, sex, culture, and movement.
    http://glife.sourceforge.net/
    Index
    Description
    News

    Screenshots

    Mailing List
    ...
    Credits

    Visit this website's sourceforge page "When man wanted to fly, he first turned to natural example - the bird - to develop his early notions of how to accomplish this difficult task. Notable failures by Daedlus and numerous bird-like contraptions (ornithopters) at first pointed in the wrong direction, but eventually persistence and the abstraction of the appropriate knowledge (lift over an airfoil) resulted in successful glider and powered flight. In contrast to this example, isn't it peculiar that when man has tried to build machine to think, learn and adapt he has ignored and largely continues to ignore one of nature's most powerful examples of adaptation, genetics, and natural selection?" (David Goldberg)
    Description
    This program is an attempt to emobdy the rules that are found in artificial life. artificial life is a subset of artificial intelligence. Artificial Life is the representation of biological phenomenon on the computer. A well known field of this is "Cellular Automata". This is basically just the simulation of cells. They live, they reproduce, they move, and they die. A good simulation that embodies this is "Conway's Game of Life". This program is similiar to "Conway's Game of Life" but yet it is very different. It takes "Conway's Game of Life" and applies it to a society (human society). This means there is a very different (and much larger) ruleset than in the original game. Things need to be taken into account such as the terrain, age, sex, culture, movement, etc.

    52. Artificial Life (ALife) Pages At Brandeis
    library. artificial life (ALife) Pages at Brandeis. This page containslinks to resources related to the field of artificial life.
    http://www.cs.brandeis.edu/~zippy/alife.html
    Page last updated 25 Oct 95. Changed name of papers link to virtual ALife library.
    Artificial Life (ALife) Pages at Brandeis
    This page contains links to resources related to the field of Artificial Life.
  • virtual ALife library : papers, software, and meta-pages.
  • groups
  • researchers ' home pages
  • journals
  • conferences The pages referred to above are maintained at Brandeis University. Patrick Tufts
  • 53. Briot, Jean-Pierre
    Laboratoire d'Informatique de Paris Object-oriented programming, concurrency/parallelism, distributed programming, flexible and adaptive programs, meta-programming and reflection, artificial intelligence, multi-agent systems, software agents, mobile agents, artificial life, computer music.
    http://www-poleia.lip6.fr/~briot/index2.html
    Jean-Pierre Briot aka Jeeps
    I am a CNRS researcher ("directeur de recherche DR2"), member of the Laboratoire d'Informatique de Paris 6 ( In this lab, I am heading the " OASIS (Objects and Agents for Simulation and Information Systems) " research thema. Currently I am interested in the issues of adaptive software for distributed cooperative applications. Adaptation can be multiple (adaptation to changes in requirements, environment...) and can be manual or automatic. This raises various issues (modeling, control, consistency...), uses various concepts and techniques (objects, actors, agents, components, software architectures, reflective architectures...) and needs various experiments, all being at the crossing of traditional fields (programming, distributed systems, artificial intelligence, artificial life...). More information on: Jean-Pierre BRIOT LIP6, Paris 6 - Case 169 8 rue du Capitaine Scott, 75015 Paris, France tel: +33 1 44 27 36 67 fax: +33 1 44 27 70 00 secr. (Ghislaine): +33 1 44 27 47 21 e-mail:

    54. Moshe Sipper, Links
    Jun. 46, ECAL'95 3rd. European Conference on artificial life. Oct. 2-3,Towards Evolvable Hardware An International Workshop. 1996. artificial life.
    http://lslwww.epfl.ch/~moshes/alife_links.html

    55. Lotus Artificial Life - Hardware Artificial Life
    Lotus artificial life's Java cellular automata substrate capable of supporting evolving, self-reproducing Category Computers artificial life Artificial Worlds......HAL Hardware artificial life. Unfortunately, your browser does notsupport Java. A Java applet is the central focus of this page.
    http://www.alife.co.uk/hal/
    HAL - Hardware Artificial Life
    Unfortunately, your browser does not support Java.
    A Java applet is the central focus of this page.
    You're encouraged to try again using a Java-aware browser.
    A version of this applet using Sun's Java plug-in is available here
    Introduction
    This applet displays a cellular automata substrate capable of supporting evolving, self-reproducing organisms which are capable of universal computation. The applet is fully interactive, allowing you to apply selection based on organisms visual characteristics using a variety of implements. Selection may also applied automatically. Currently the built in selection methods are for size and shape only. The cellular automata uses a strict von-Neumann neighbourhood and is based on an innovative, multi-layered design. The whole architecture is designed to be implemented on massively parallel hardware.
    Central to HAL's design is the use of fine-grained massive parallelism which, on appropriate hardware, should allow maximum possible performance to be reached. Note: if you're playing with wiping out organisms manually you'll probably want to have the 'No selection at all' checkbox ticked - this causes all cells to be born pregnant and removes some constraints which abort malformed offspring.

    56. Www.alife.org: ALIFE VI
    Sixth International Conference on artificial life. Life and Computationthe Boundaries are Changing. MORE INFORMATION What is artificial life?
    http://alife6.alife.org/
    Sixth International Conference on Artificial Life
    Life and Computation: the Boundaries are Changing
    University of California, Los Angeles
    June 26-29, 1998
    ALIFE VI will be held in June of 1998 on the campus of the University of California, Los Angeles, at the Sunset Village conference center, which is a self-contained facility with hotel-style lodging and conference rooms. Over 40 papers will be presented, and approximately 20 posters will be set up for viewing during the conference, with a special demo and poster presentation scheduled for the evening of Saturday, June 27th. In addition, workshops on a wide variety of subjects will be offered during Friday, June 26th, for those who can come early. Walk in registration is possible! See the registration information for details. M ORE I NFORMATION:

    57. Studies On Consciousness, Mind And Life
    This page contains information about Piero Scaruffi's research and teaching activities in Cognitive Science, Psychology of Consciousness and Philosophy of Mind, as well as links to his papers and to the annotated bibliography of cognitive science, artificial intelligence, neurobiology, artificial life, linguistics, neural networks, connectionism, cognitive psychology, consciousness
    http://www.thymos.com/
    THYMOS
    Studies on Consciousness, Mind and Life What does Thymos mean My personal website My e-mail
    Versione italiana
    ... Japanese Version Research Interests:
    • Cognitive Science,
    • Philosophy of Mind,
    • Artificial Intelligence,
    • Neurobiology,
    • Theoretical Physics

    Essays

    Independent Workshops

    A History of Philosophy
    Annotated Bibliography on the Mind

    (with links to publishers, libraries, bibliographies, etc.)
    Thinking about Thought

    (my book on formal theories of Cognition, Mind, Consciousness)
    Seminar on Formal Theories of Consciousness

    Seminar on History of Knowledge
    Register to my mailing list
    . Every two months or so, I send out news and updates on cognitive science and the likes, reviews of books, announcement of conferences, and the status of my book. News from the scientific world A simple theory of consciousness Statement of work (2000) Research statement (1995) ... FREQUENCY PROCESSING AND COGNITION Recent essays:
  • Language as a neural process
  • Consciousness as multi-track evolution
  • A reductionist explanation of the self
  • The experimental study of consciousness ... U.S.A. Libraries
    Personal Research Statement:
  • The very fundamental idea of my research is that the mental cannot be reduced to the physical and that somehow the property that, under special circumstances, enables a particular configuration of matter (e.g., the brain) to exhibit "consciousness" must be present in all matter, starting from the most fundamental constituents.
  • 58. Www.alife.org: What Is Artificial Life?
    What is artificial life? The term artificial life is used to describe research intohumanmade systems that possess some of the essential properties of life.
    http://alife6.alife.org/intro.html
    What is Artificial Life?
    by Chris Adami and Titus Brown The term "Artificial Life" is used to describe research into human-made systems that possess some of the essential properties of life. As it turns out, there are many such systems that meet this criteriondigital, test-tube, and mechanicaland these can be used to perform experiments aimed at revealing the principles and the organization of living systems on Earth as well as elsewhere. This effort is truly interdisciplinary and runs the gamut from biology, chemistry and physics to computer science and engineering. While a large part of Artificial Life is devoted to understanding life as we know it - that is, life on earth - a significant effort concerns the search for principles of living systems which are independent of a particular substrate. Thus, Artificial Life also considers life "as it could be", exploring artificial alternatives to a carbon-based chemistry. Artificial Life is often described as attempting to understand high-level behavior from low-level rules; for example, how the simple rules of Darwinian evolution lead to high-level structure, or the way in which the simple interactions between ants and their environment lead to complex trail-following behavior. Understanding this relationship in particular systems promises to provide novel solutions to complex real-world problems, such as disease prevention, stock-market prediction, and data-mining on the Internet. The construction of living systems out of non-living parts is clearly the most ambitious of all the areas of Artificial Life. At present, this subfield is split into two largely independent endeavors: the creation of life using the classical building blocks of nature (carbon-based life) and the creation of life using the same principles but a different medium for implementation: the computer. The former explores the possibility of "RNA worlds" by attempting to construct self-replicating molecules; the latter, by simulating simple populations of self-replicating entities, examines the abilities and characteristics of different chemistries in supporting life-like behavior. Thus, both the biochemical and the computational approaches seek to shed light on the compelling question of the origin of life.

    59. Brian L. Keeley Homepage
    Philosophy of artificial life (Washington Univ., USA).
    http://bernard.pitzer.edu/~bkeeley/
    Brian L Keeley
    Assistant Professor of Philosophy Pitzer College Mailing Address: Pitzer College
    1050 N. Mills Avenue
    Claremont, CA 91711
    U.S.A. Office Hours (Spring 2003):
    • T:
    ...or by appointment. Office: 107 Broad Hall ( NOT Broad Center). Click me!
    (image courtesy of Gregg Segal) Phone: +(909) 607-4235 - office Fax: ("Attn: B. Keeley") Preferred method of communication: Email: brian_keeley@pitzer.edu Research Interests:
    • Philosophy of Neuroscience Philosophy of Mind Cognitive Science Neuroethology of Animal Behavior
    Basically, I believe that one's Home Page ought to be "Just the Facts, Ma'am."
    From here, you can choose three paths, for more info about moi: Dr. Brian L. Keeley, the researcher
    or
    Prof. Keeley, the teacher

    or
    Reality, my cyber-avatar

    60. Framsticks - Artificial Life - 3D Evolution And Simulation
    a threedimensional life simulation projectCategory Computers artificial life Artificial Worlds......
    http://www.frams.poznan.pl/
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