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Santa Fe Institute

Cowan,et al Santa Fe Institute founded, serving as a preeminent center for the interdisciplinary study of complex systems... [Pg.4]

Langton First artificial life conference held at the Santa Fe Institute... [Pg.4]

Other important historical landmarks include the founding, in 1984, of the Santa Fe Institute, which is one of the leading interdisciplinary centers for complex systems theory research the first conference devoted solely to research in cellular automata (which is a prototypical mathematical model of complex systems), organized by Farmer, Toffoli and Wolfram at MIT in 1984 [farmer84] and the first artificial life conference, organized by Chri.s Langton at Los Alamos National Laboratory, in 1987 [lang89]. [Pg.4]

Swarm is a multi-agent simulation platform for the study of complex adaptive systems. It is currently under development at the Santa Fe Institute ... [Pg.568]

Iane95] David Lane and R. Maxfield, Foresight, Complexity, and Strategy, Santa Fe Institute, 95-12-106, 1995. [Pg.771]

Kramers piiblislied, and was, I suspect, anxious to start a new writing project. The year was 1987 four years after Wolfram s groundbreaking review article on celhilar automata that appeared in Reviews of Modern Physics [wolfSSa], and three years after the founding of the Santa Fe Institute, now arguably one of the world s leading centers for complex systems research. [Pg.832]

In recent years, the transitions from nonliving to living matter have been the subject of three seminars, bringing together theoreticians and experimentalists in the Los Alamos National Laboratory, in the Santa Fe Institute and in Dortmund. The biogenesis problem was expanded to the question, how can simple life forms be synthesised in the laboratory Artificial cells (sometimes called protocells) could be quite different from the cell types known today, or from primeval cells they might, for example, be orders of magnitude smaller than a bacterium. The seminars posed three questions for further work ... [Pg.308]

Lindgren, K. (1991) Evolutionary phenomena in simple dynamics, in Artificial life II (ed. C.G. Langton et al), Santa Fe Institute for Studies in the Sciences of Complexity, X, 295—312. [Pg.75]

This section of the Annual Reports comprises five contributions from experts in their fields. These contributions attempt to meld advanced technical aspects of biopolymer selection with more theoretical treatments. As a result, the interplay between the applied and basic scientific aspects of an emergent field becomes apparent. The opus by Dr. Bennett Levitan (Santa Fe Institute) provides one of the first coherent frameworks for understanding selection techniques. This chapter provides a firm connection between the experimental techniques used and the probabilistic models that of necessity underlie these techniques, and should prove to be a benchmark both in understanding why selections... [Pg.93]

Santa Fe Institute, 1399Hyde Park Road, Santa Fe, NM 87501, U.S.A. [Pg.95]

Eigen, M., In Pines, D. (Ed.) Emerging Synthesis in Science Proceedings of the Founding Workshops ofthe Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, NM, U.S.A., 1985, pp. 25-69. [Pg.150]

Institutfiir Theoretische Chemie und Strahlencherme der Universitat Wien, Wahringerstrasse 17, A-1090 Wien, Austria and Santa Fe Institute, 1399 Hyde Park Road Santa Fe, NM87501, U.S.A. [Pg.153]

The work reported here was supported financially by the Austrian Fonds zur Forderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung (Projects P-10578-MAT and P-11065), by the Commission of the European Union (Contract Study PSS 0884), and by the Santa Fe Institute. [Pg.167]

Stuart Kauffman of the Santa Fe Institute is a leading proponent of complexity theory. Simply put, it proposes that many features of living systems are the result of self-organization—the tendency of complex systems to arrange themselves in patterns—and not natural selection ... [Pg.29]

Another restless scientist is Stuart Kauffman of the Santa Fe Institute. The complexity of the metabolism of living organisms makes him doubt that a step-by-step approach would work ... [Pg.155]

Los Alamos National Laboratory (Los Alamos, NM) The Santa Fe Institute (Santa Fe, NM)... [Pg.580]

Bonabeau E, Dorigo M, Theraulaz G (1999) Swarm intelligence from natural to artificial systems, Santa Fe Institute Studies on the Sciences of Complexity, Oxford University Press, New York... [Pg.187]


See other pages where Santa Fe Institute is mentioned: [Pg.3]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.607]    [Pg.612]    [Pg.723]    [Pg.728]    [Pg.731]    [Pg.749]    [Pg.758]    [Pg.782]    [Pg.799]    [Pg.836]    [Pg.351]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.211]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.167]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 , Pg.607 ]




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