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research article

Co-evolving non-uniform cellular automata to perform computations

Sipper, M.  
1996
Physica D

A major impediment of cellular automata (CA) stems from the difficulty of utilizing their complex behavior to perform useful computations. Recent studies by Packard and Mitchell et al. have shown that CAs can be evolved to perform a computational task. In this paper non-uniform CAs are studied, where each cell may contain a different rule, in contrast to the original, uniform model. We describe experiments in which non-uniform CAs are evolved to perform the computational task using a local, co-evolutionary algorithm. For radius r = 3 we attain peak performance values of 0.92 comparable to those obtained for uniform CAs (0.93–0.95). This is notable considering the huge search spaces involved, much larger than the uniform case. Smaller radius CAs (previously unstudied in this context) attain performance values of 0.93–0.94. For r = 1 this is considerably higher than the maximal possible uniform CA performance of 0.83, suggesting that non-uniformity reduces connectivity requirements. We thus demonstrate that: (1) non-uniform CAs can attain high computational performance, and (2) such systems can be evolved rather than designed.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/0167-2789(95)00286-3
Web of Science ID

WOS:A1996UK27900005

Author(s)
Sipper, M.  
Date Issued

1996

Published in
Physica D
Volume

92

Issue

3-4

Start page

193

End page

208

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LSL  
Available on Infoscience
November 30, 2004
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/177327
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