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Is it possible to "guide" the process of self-organisation
towards specific patterns and outcomes?Wouldn t this be
self-contradictory?After all, a self-organising process assumes a
transition into a more organised form, or towards a more structured
functionality, in the "absence" of centralised control.Then how can
we place the guiding elements so that they do not override rich
choices potentially discoverable by an uncontrolled process?
This book presents different approaches to resolving this
"paradox."In doing so, the presented studies address a broad range
of phenomena, ranging from autopoietic systems to morphological
computation, and from small-world networks to information cascades
in swarms.A large variety of methods is employed, from spontaneous
symmetry breaking to information dynamics to evolutionary
algorithms, creating a rich spectrum reflecting this emerging
field.
Demonstrating several foundational theories and frameworks, as
well as innovative practical implementations, "Guided
Self-Organisation: Inception," will be an invaluable tool for
advanced students and researchers in a multiplicity of fields
across computer science, physics and biology, including information
theory, robotics, dynamical systems, graph theory, artificial life,
multi-agent systems, theory of computation and machine
learning.
"
How do we design a self-organizing system? Is it possible to
validate and control non-deterministic dynamics? What is the right
balance between the emergent patterns that bring robustness,
adaptability and scalability, and the traditional need for
verification and validation of the outcomes? The last several
decades have seen much progress from original ideas of "emergent
functionality" and "design for emergence", to sophisticated
mathematical formalisms of "guided self-organization". And yet the
main challenge remains, attracting the best scientific and
engineering expertise to this elusive problem. This book presents
state-of-the-practice of successfully engineered self-organizing
systems, and examines ways to balance design and self-organization
in the context of applications. As demonstrated in this second
edition of Advances in Applied Self-Organizing Systems, finding
this balance helps to deal with practical challenges as diverse as
navigation of microscopic robots within blood vessels,
self-monitoring aerospace vehicles, collective and modular robotics
adapted for autonomous reconnaissance and surveillance,
self-managing grids and multiprocessor scheduling, data
visualization and self-modifying digital and analog circuitry,
intrusion detection in computer networks, reconstruction of
hydro-physical fields, traffic management, immunocomputing and
nature-inspired computation. Many algorithms proposed and discussed
in this volume are biologically inspired, and the reader will also
gain an insight into cellular automata, genetic algorithms,
artificial immune systems, snake-like locomotion, ant foraging,
birds flocking, neuromorphic circuits, amongst others.
Demonstrating the practical relevance and applicability of
self-organization, Advances in Applied Self-Organizing Systems will
be an invaluable tool for advanced students and researchers in a
wide range of fields.
Is it possible to guide the process of self-organisation towards
specific patterns and outcomes? Wouldn’t this be
self-contradictory? After all, a self-organising process
assumes a transition into a more organised form, or towards a more
structured functionality, in the absence of centralised
control. Then how can we place the guiding elements so that
they do not override rich choices potentially discoverable by an
uncontrolled process? This book presents different approaches to
resolving this paradox. In doing so, the presented studies
address a broad range of phenomena, ranging from autopoietic
systems to morphological computation, and from small-world networks
to information cascades in swarms. A large variety of methods
is employed, from spontaneous symmetry breaking to information
dynamics to evolutionary algorithms, creating a rich spectrum
reflecting this emerging field. Demonstrating several foundational
theories and frameworks, as well as innovative practical
implementations, Guided Self-Organisation: Inception, will be an
invaluable tool for advanced students and researchers in a
multiplicity of fields across computer science, physics and
biology, including information theory, robotics, dynamical systems,
graph theory, artificial life, multi-agent systems, theory of
computation and machine learning.
How do we design a self-organizing system? Is it possible to
validate and control non-deterministic dynamics? What is the right
balance between the emergent patterns that bring robustness,
adaptability and scalability, and the traditional need for
verification and validation of the outcomes? The last several
decades have seen much progress from original ideas of "emergent
functionality" and "design for emergence", to sophisticated
mathematical formalisms of "guided self-organization". And yet the
main challenge remains, attracting the best scientific and
engineering expertise to this elusive problem. This book presents
state-of-the-practice of successfully engineered self-organizing
systems, and examines ways to balance design and self-organization
in the context of applications. As demonstrated in this second
edition of Advances in Applied Self-Organizing Systems, finding
this balance helps to deal with practical challenges as diverse as
navigation of microscopic robots within blood vessels,
self-monitoring aerospace vehicles, collective and modular robotics
adapted for autonomous reconnaissance and surveillance,
self-managing grids and multiprocessor scheduling, data
visualization and self-modifying digital and analog circuitry,
intrusion detection in computer networks, reconstruction of
hydro-physical fields, traffic management, immunocomputing and
nature-inspired computation. Many algorithms proposed and discussed
in this volume are biologically inspired, and the reader will also
gain an insight into cellular automata, genetic algorithms,
artificial immune systems, snake-like locomotion, ant foraging,
birds flocking, neuromorphic circuits, amongst others.
Demonstrating the practical relevance and applicability of
self-organization, Advances in Applied Self-Organizing Systems will
be an invaluable tool for advanced students and researchers in a
wide range of fields.
Double bill of silent features from the 1920s. 'Battleship
Potemkin' (1925), masterpiece of Russian silent film pioneer Sergei
M. Eisenstein, is a dramatised account of the naval mutiny and
street riots at the sea port of Odessa that sparked off the 1905
Russian Revolution. When the crew of the Potemkin protests after
being given rotten meat as rations, the captain responds by
ordering the execution of the dissidents. Outrage at this injustice
quickly ignites and the townspeople have soon surrounded the
harbour in a mass demonstration - but the scene gives way to
tragedy and brutality as the authorities move in to quell the
uprising. In British documentary 'Drifters' (1929), which was
influenced by and originally screened alongside 'Battleship
Potemkin' in the UK, director John Grierson looks at the North Sea
herring fleets and the men who worked them. The film pays
particular attention to how the once traditional industry has
become a more modern enterprise.
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