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    IEEE ALIFE 2011 - IEEE ALIFE 2011 2011 IEEE Symposium on Artificial Life

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    Website www.ieee-ssci.org | Want to Edit it Edit Freely

    Category IEEE ALIFE 2011

    Deadline: October 31, 2010 | Date: April 11, 2011-April 15, 2011

    Venue/Country: Paris, France

    Updated: 2010-08-02 13:36:41 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    IEEE ALIFE 2011

    2011 IEEE Symposium on Artificial Life

    IEEE ALIFE 2010 brings together researchers working on the emerging areas of Artificial Life and Complex Adaptive Systems, aiming to understand and synthesize life-like systems and applying bio-inspired synthetic methods to other science/engineering disciplines, including Biology, Robotics, Social Sciences, among others.

    Artificial Life is the study of the simulation and synthesis of living systems. In particular, this science of generalized living and life- like systems provides engineering with billions of years of design expertise to learn from and exploit through the example of the evolution of organic life on earth. Increased understanding of the massively successful design diversity, complexity, and adaptability of life is rapidly making inroads into all areas of engineering and the Sciences of the Artificial. Numerous applications of ideas from nature and their generalizations from life-as-we-know-it to life-as-it-could- be continually find their way into engineering and science.

    Topics

    Some sample topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following aspects of Artificial Life:

    Systems Biology, Astrobiology, Origins of Replicators and Life

    Major Evolutionary Transitions

    Applications in Nanotechnology, Compilable Matter, or Medicine

    Genetic Regulatory Systems

    Predictive Methods for Complex Adaptive Systems

    Self-reproduction, Self-Repair, and Morphogenesis

    Robotic and Embodiment: Minimal, Adaptive, Ontogenetic and/or Social Robotics

    Human-Robot Interaction

    Constructive Dynamical Systems and Complexity

    Evolvability, Heritability, and Multicellularity

    Information-Theoretic Methods in Life-like Systems

    Sensor and Actuator Evolution and Adaptation

    Wet and Dry Artificial Life (e.g. artificial cells; non-carbon based life)

    Non-Traditional Computational Media

    Emergence and Complexity

    Multiscale Robustness and Plasticity

    Phenotypic Plasticity and Adaptability in Scalable, Robust Growing Systems

    Predictive Methods for Complex Adaptive Systems and Life-like Systems

    Automata Networks and Cellular Automata

    Ethics and Philosophy of Artificial Life

    Co-evolution and Symbiogenesis

    Simulation and Visualization Tools for Artificial Life

    Replicator and Interaction Dynamics

    Network Theory in Biology and Artificial Life

    Synchronization and Biological Clocks

    Methods and Applications of Evolutionary Developmental Systems (e.g. developmental genetic-regulatory networks (DGRNs), multicellularity)

    Games and Generalized Biology

    Self-organization, Swarms and Multicellular Systems

    Emergence of Signaling and Communication

    Applications in Sociology, Economics and Behavioral Sciences

    Symposium Co-Chairs

    Terry Bossomaier, Charles Sturt University, Australia

    Hiroki Sayama, State University of New York, USA

    Chrystopher Nehaniv, University of Hertfordshire, UK

    Program Committee

    Hussein Abbass, University of New South Wales, Australian Defence Force Academy, Australia

    Andrew Adamatzky, University of the West of England, UK

    Andreas Albrecht, Queen's University Belfast, UK

    Fernando Almeida e Costa, University of Sussex, UK

    Lee Altenberg, University of Hawaii, USA

    Takaya Arita, Nagoya University, Japan

    Wolfgang Banzhaf, Memorial University, Canada

    Randall Beer, Indiana University, USA

    Axel Bender, Defence Science and Technology Organisation, Australia

    René te Boekhorst, University of Hertfordshire, UK

    Josh Bongard, University of Vermont, USA

    Seth Bullock, University of Southampton, UK

    Martin V. Butz, University of Würzburg, Germany

    Lola Cañamero, University of Hertfordshire, UK

    Angelo Cangelosi, University of Plymouth, UK

    Kerstin Dautenhahn, University of Hertfordshire, UK

    Marco Dorigo, Universite libre de Bruxelles, Belgium

    Alan Dorin, Monash University, Australia

    René Doursat, Complex Systems Institute, Paris, France

    Margaret J. Eppstein, University of Vermont, USA

    Dario Floreano, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland

    Robert A. Freitas, Jr., Institute for Molecular Manufacturing, USA

    Carlos Gershenson, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico

    Steve Grand, Cyberlife Research, UK

    David Green, Monash University, Australia

    Pauline Haddow, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway

    Inman Harvey, University of Sussex, UK

    Takashi Ikegami, University of Tokyo, Japan

    Christian Jacob, University of Calgary, Canada

    Jan T. Kim, University of East Anglia, UK

    Hod Lipson, Cornell University, USA

    Bob McKay, Seoul National University, Korea

    Peter William McOwan, Queen Mary, University of London, UK

    Assif Mirza, Italian Institute of Technology, Italy

    Amiram Moshaiov, Tel-Aviv University, Israel

    Akira Namatame, National Defense Academy, Japan

    Jason Noble, University of Southampton, UK

    Stefano Nolfi, Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, CNR, Italy

    Ferdinand Peper, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan

    Daniel Polani, University of Hertfordshire, UK

    Steen Rasmussen, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark

    Thomas S. Ray, University of Oklahoma, USA

    Luis Rocha, Indiana University, USA

    Matthias Scheutz, Indiana University, USA

    Adrian Stoica, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA

    Masanori Sugisaka, Nippon Bunri University, Japan

    Reiji Suzuki, Nagoya University, Japan

    Tim Taylor, Timberpost, UK

    Christof Teuscher, Portland State University, USA

    Hugo Touchette, Queen Mary, University of London, UK

    Andy Tyrrell, University of York, UK

    Tatsuo Unemi, Soka University, Japan

    Sebastian von Mammen, University of Calgary, Canada

    Juyang Weng, Michigan State University, USA

    Justin Werfel, Harvard University, USA

    Jason Teo Tze Wi, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, Malaysia

    Janet Wiles, University of Queensland, Australia

    Larry Yaeger, Indiana University, USA


    Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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