[misc.wanted] "Artificial Life" conference at Los Alamos National Laboratories

ray@vax1.acs.udel.EDU (Thomas Ray) (02/22/89)

     I would like to obtain the proceedings, or information about the
proceedings of the "Artificial Life" conference held last fall at the
Los Alamos National Laboratories.  Please post information by e-mail or
snail mail to:

Tom Ray
School of Life & Health Sciences
University of Delaware
Newark, DE  19816
302-451-2753
ray@vax1.acs.udel.edu

cgl@beta.lanl.gov (C G Langton) (02/27/89)

The proceedings of the first Artificial Life workshop are available from 
Addison-Wesley. They have a toll-free number for ordering: 800-447-2226.

The title is "Artificial Life: Proceedings of an Interdisciplinary Workshop
              on the Synthesis and Simulation of Living Systems"
              
Edited by Christopher G. Langton

Volume # 6 in the series: Santa Fe Institute Studies in the 
                          Sciences of Complexity.
                      
The order #'s are: Hardback  (~$40) 0-201-09346-4
                   Paperback (~$20) 0-201-09356-1
                   
                   
Here's the "official blurb":

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                     Artificial Life
                     
     The Proceedings of an Interdisciplinary Workshop 
     on the Synthesis and Simulation of Living Systems 
              
              
            Edited by Christopher G. Langton 
            
              Center for Nonlinear Studies  
              Los Alamos National Laboratory 
       
         

Artificial Life has recently emerged as a new and exciting field of scientific 
research attempting to synthesize physical, chemical, or computational processes 
which capture the complex dynamical and adaptive behaviors exhibited by natural 
living systems. The field promises to make fundamental contributions to theoretical 
biology by abstracting the logical form of life from its material basis, thereby 
helping to locate life-as-we-know-it within the larger context of life-as-it-could-be, 
in any of its possible physical incarnations. 

"Artificial Life" summarizes a workshop conducted by the Center for Nonlinear 
Studies at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Part of the Santa Fe Institute Studies 
in the Sciences of Complexity series published by Addison-Wesley, the book introduces 
the field of Artificial Life, reviews its historical roots, and discusses its primary 
goals and methodological approaches - giving examples of a variety of modeling 
technologies and their application to the synthesis of specific biological phenomena. 
It also contains an extensive annotated bibliography of more than 500 citations of 
work relevant to the field of Artificial Life, and includes 40 illustrative color plates. 

This proceedings volume includes papers on:

    The historical roots of Artificial Life
   
    The technical, theoretical, philosophical, and ethical challanges 
         confronting the field 
     
    The application of methods and results from nonlinear dynamics, 
         robotics, automata and formal language theory, artificial intelligence, 
         computer graphics, and nanotechnology to the pursuit of Artificial Life
      
    Modeling techniques for the study of the origin of life, evolution,
         growth and development, ecological dynamics, and many other phenomenological 
         aspects of life. 
    
       
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Here is the table of contents:

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Artificial Life 
    Christopher G. Langton - CNLS/LANL

Artificial Organisms: History, Problems, and Directions
    Richard Laing - Logic of Computers Group, U. of Michigan
    
Simulations, Realizations, and Theories of Life
    H.H. Pattee - SUNY
    
Towards a Quantitative Theory of the Origin of Life
    Steen Rasmussen - Technical University of Denmark & CNLS/LANL
    
Cellular Automata, Reaction-Diffusion Systems, and the Origin of Life
    Pablo Tamayo - Boston University
    Hyman Hartman - Stanford University
    
Precipitation Membranes, Osmotic Growths, and Synthetic Biology
    Milan Zeleny - SUNY
    George J. Klir - SUNY
    Kevin D. Hufford - SUNY/Cornell
    
Evolving Bugs in a Simulated Ecosystem
    Norman Packard - CCSR, U. of Illinois 
    
The Genetic Algorithm and Simulated Evolution
    Stewart W. Wilson - The Rowland Institute for Science  
    
Human Culture: A Genetic Takeover Underway
    Hans Moravec - Robotics Institute, CMU
    
The Evolution of Evolvability
    Richard Dawkins - Oxford
    
Developmental Models of Multicellular Organisms: 
a Computer Graphics Perspective
    Aristid Lindenmayer - Utrecht
    Przemyslaw Prusinkiewicz - U. of Regina
    
The Artificial Menagerie
    Peter Oppenheimer - NYIT
    
RAM: Artificial Life for the Exploration of Complex Biological Systems
    Charles E. Taylor, David R. Jefferson, 
    Scott R. Turner, & Seth R. Goldman - UCLA
    
Mirror Beyond Mirror: Puddles of Life
    Pauline Hogeweg - Bioinformatica, Utrecht
    
Movable Finite Automata: 
A New Tool for Computer Modeling of Living Systems
    Narendra S. Goel, Richard L. Thompson - SUNY
    
Computational Metabolism: 
Towards Biological Geometries for Computing
    Marek W. Lugowski - U. of Indiana
    
Typogenetics: A Logic for Artificial Life
    Harold C. Morris - U. of British Columbia
    
Lego, Logo, and Life  
    Mitchel Resnick - MIT Media Lab
    
Modeling Behavior in Petworld
    Bill Coderre - MIT Media Lab
    
Animal Construction Kits
    Michael Travers - MIT Media Lab
    
Nanotechnology with Feynman Machines: 
Scanning Tunneling Engineering and Artificial Life
    Conrad Schneiker - U. of Arizona
    
Biological and Nanomechanical Systems: 
Contrasts in Evolutionary Capacity
    K. Eric Drexler - Stanford
    
Molecular Automata in Microtubules:
Basic Computational Logic of the Living State?
    Stuart Hameroff - U. of Arizona
    Steen Rasmussen & Bengt Mansson 
        - Technical University of Denmark
    
Some Types of Movements
    Valentino Braitenberg 
        - Max Planck Institute of Biological Cybernetics
 
 
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We are planning on holding the Second Artificial Life Workshop in 
Santa Fe in the early Spring of 1990.

For further information about the proceedings, or to be placed on the 
mailing list for announcements of workshops, proceedings, etc, please
send an email message to:



Chris Langton

Center for Nonlinear Studies		Phone: 505-665-0059
MS B258					Email: cgl@LANL.GOV
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Los Alamos, New Mexico
87545