| Gary William Flake. The Computational Beauty of Nature. The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1999. |
....character. The genetic search is started as usual. However, a second meta level module exists which observes the search process. Once sucient data is collected to construct the model, the meta module starts supervising the search. The importance of this approach is explicitly noted by [15]. Natural phenomena is analyzed in relation with the notions of computability and incomputability in [15] It is stated that recursion, parallelism and adaptation are interesting attributes of complex systems. An adaptive system which also receives feedback from itself is denoted as the nal level ....
....which observes the search process. Once sucient data is collected to construct the model, the meta module starts supervising the search. The importance of this approach is explicitly noted by [15] Natural phenomena is analyzed in relation with the notions of computability and incomputability in [15]. It is stated that recursion, parallelism and adaptation are interesting attributes of complex systems. An adaptive system which also receives feedback from itself is denoted as the nal level in the hierarchy of computational systems [15] On the other side, the attempts presented are mostly ....
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Gary William Flake. The Computational Beauty of Nature. The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1998.
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Gary William Flake. The Computational Beauty of Nature. The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1999.
No context found.
Gary William Flake. The Computational Beauty of Nature. MIT Press, 1998.
No context found.
Gary William Flake. The Computational Beauty of Nature. MIT Press, 1998. (Contains a chapter on ZCS).
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