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Self-Organization and Artificial Life
[article]
2020
arXiv
pre-print
Self-organization can be broadly defined as the ability of a system to display ordered spatio-temporal patterns solely as the result of the interactions among the system components. Processes of this kind characterize both living and artificial systems, making self-organization a concept that is at the basis of several disciplines, from physics to biology and engineering. Placed at the frontiers between disciplines, Artificial Life (ALife) has heavily borrowed concepts and tools from the study
arXiv:1903.07456v2
fatcat:qm2ltfuqjfemlf6rgixhxu6jza