Artificial life: organization, adaptation and complexity from the bottom up

Bedau, Mark A. “Artificial life: organization, adaptation and complexity from the bottom up.” Trends in cognitive sciences 7, no. 11 (2003): 505-512.
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Artificial life attempts to understand the essential general properties of living systems by synthesizing life-like behavior in software, hardware and biochemicals. As many of the essential abstract properties of living systems (e.g. autonomous adaptive and intelligent behavior) are also studied by cognitive science, artificial life and cognitive science have an essential overlap. This review highlights the state of the art in artificial life with respect to dynamical hierarchies, molecular self-organization, evolutionary robotics, the evolution of complexity and language, and other practical applications. It also speculates about future connections between artificial life and cognitive science.

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