1,626 research outputs found

    Cellular Automaton Belousov-Zhabotinsky Model for Binary Full Adder

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    © 2017 World Scientific Publishing Company. The continuous increment in the performance of classical computers has been driven to its limit. New ways are studied to avoid this oncoming bottleneck and many answers can be found. An example is the Belousov-Zhabotinsky (BZ) reaction which includes some fundamental and essential characteristics that attract chemists, biologists, and computer scientists. Interaction of excitation wave-fronts in BZ system, can be interpreted in terms of logical gates and applied in the design of unconventional hardware components. Logic gates and other more complicated components have been already proposed using different topologies and particular characteristics. In this study, the inherent parallelism and simplicity of Cellular Automata (CAs) modeling is combined with an Oregonator model of light-sensitive version of BZ reaction. The resulting parallel and computationally-inexpensive model has the ability to simulate a topology that can be considered as a one-bit full adder digital component towards the design of an Arithmetic Logic Unit (ALU)

    Frontiers of Membrane Computing: Open Problems and Research Topics

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    This is a list of open problems and research topics collected after the Twelfth Conference on Membrane Computing, CMC 2012 (Fontainebleau, France (23 - 26 August 2011), meant initially to be a working material for Tenth Brainstorming Week on Membrane Computing, Sevilla, Spain (January 30 - February 3, 2012). The result was circulated in several versions before the brainstorming and then modified according to the discussions held in Sevilla and according to the progresses made during the meeting. In the present form, the list gives an image about key research directions currently active in membrane computing

    Graph-Transfromational Swarms : A Graph-Transformational Approach to Swarm Computation

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    Computer systems are becoming increasingly distributed and interconnected. Various emerging notions, such as smart grids, system of systems, industry 4.0 or cyber-physical systems have gained more and more importance during the last few years. All of them propose to solve engineering problems by using several autonomous components that act in parallel and are interconnected, foremost using Internet technologies. These emerging concepts look very promising, but also exhibit various technical challenges. For instance, how is it possible to develop decentralized control mechanisms that produce a desired emerging behavior to solve a given task or how to model such solutions in order to analyze their behavior in terms of complexity and correctness? These are two major questions that this thesis attempts to answer. Indeed, it provides graph-transformational swarms as a novel concept that combines the ideas and principles of swarms and swarm computing and the formal methods of graph transformation to model distributed systems. Graph-transformational swarms captures the advantages of swarms and swarm computing and of graph transformation

    On using compressibility to detect when slime mould completed computation

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    © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Slime mould Physarum polycephalum is a single cell visible by an unaided eye. The slime mould optimizes its network of protoplasmic tubes in gradients of attractants and repellents. This behavior is interpreted as computation. Several prototypes of the slime mould computers were designed to solve problems of computation geometry, graphs, transport networks, and to implement universal computing circuits. Being a living substrate, the slime mould does not halt its behavior when a task is solved but often continues foraging the space thus masking the solution found. We propose to use temporal changes in compressibility of the slime mould patterns as indicators of the halting of the computation. Compressibility of a pattern characterizes the pattern's morphological diversity, that is, a number of different local configurations. At the beginning of computation the slime explores the space, thus generating less compressible patterns. After gradients of attractants and repellents are detected the slime spans data sites with its protoplasmic network and retracts scouting branches, thus generating more compressible patterns. We analyze the feasibility of the approach on results of laboratory experiments and computer modelling

    Towards a Holistic CAD Platform for Nanotechnologies

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    Silicon-based CMOS technologies are predicted to reach their ultimate limits by the middle of the next decade. Research on nanotechnologies is actively conducted, in a world-wide effort to develop new technologies able to maintain the Moore's law. They promise revolutionizing the computing systems by integrating tremendous numbers of devices at low cost. These trends will have a profound impact on the architectures of computing systems and will require a new paradigm of CAD. The paper presents a work in progress on this direction. It is aimed at fitting requirements and constraints of nanotechnologies, in an effort to achieve efficient use of the huge computing power promised by them. To achieve this goal we are developing CAD tools able to exploit efficiently these huge computing capabilities promised by nanotechnologies in the domain of simulation of complex systems composed by huge numbers of relatively simple elements.Comment: Submitted on behalf of TIMA Editions (http://irevues.inist.fr/tima-editions
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