1,902 research outputs found
A guided tour of asynchronous cellular automata
Research on asynchronous cellular automata has received a great amount of
attention these last years and has turned to a thriving field. We survey the
recent research that has been carried out on this topic and present a wide
state of the art where computing and modelling issues are both represented.Comment: To appear in the Journal of Cellular Automat
Asynchronism Induces Second Order Phase Transitions in Elementary Cellular Automata
Cellular automata are widely used to model natural or artificial systems.
Classically they are run with perfect synchrony, i.e., the local rule is
applied to each cell at each time step. A possible modification of the updating
scheme consists in applying the rule with a fixed probability, called the
synchrony rate. For some particular rules, varying the synchrony rate
continuously produces a qualitative change in the behaviour of the cellular
automaton. We investigate the nature of this change of behaviour using
Monte-Carlo simulations. We show that this phenomenon is a second-order phase
transition, which we characterise more specifically as belonging to the
directed percolation or to the parity conservation universality classes studied
in statistical physics
On the decomposition of stochastic cellular automata
In this paper we present two interesting properties of stochastic cellular
automata that can be helpful in analyzing the dynamical behavior of such
automata. The first property allows for calculating cell-wise probability
distributions over the state set of a stochastic cellular automaton, i.e.
images that show the average state of each cell during the evolution of the
stochastic cellular automaton. The second property shows that stochastic
cellular automata are equivalent to so-called stochastic mixtures of
deterministic cellular automata. Based on this property, any stochastic
cellular automaton can be decomposed into a set of deterministic cellular
automata, each of which contributes to the behavior of the stochastic cellular
automaton.Comment: Submitted to Journal of Computation Science, Special Issue on
Cellular Automata Application
Failover in cellular automata
A cellular automata (CA) configuration is constructed that exhibits emergent
failover. The configuration is based on standard Game of Life rules. Gliders
and glider-guns form the core messaging structure in the configuration. The
blinker is represented as the basic computational unit, and it is shown how it
can be recreated in case of a failure. Stateless failover using primary-backup
mechanism is demonstrated. The details of the CA components used in the
configuration and its working are described, and a simulation of the complete
configuration is also presented.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures and associated video at
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/7553694/failover_demo.avi and simulation at
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/7553694/failover_simulation.ja
Identification of cellular automata based on incomplete observations with bounded time gaps
In this paper, the problem of identifying the cellular automata (CAs) is considered. We frame and solve this problem in the context of incomplete observations, i.e., prerecorded, incomplete configurations of the system at certain, and unknown time stamps. We consider 1-D, deterministic, two-state CAs only. An identification method based on a genetic algorithm with individuals of variable length is proposed. The experimental results show that the proposed method is highly effective. In addition, connections between the dynamical properties of CAs (Lyapunov exponents and behavioral classes) and the performance of the identification algorithm are established and analyzed
- …