call for papers, previous message From: memetral@media.mit.edu (Max Metral) Subject: Artificial Life IV Workshop Program Announcement (LONG) Date: 18 May 1994 22:06:25 GMT [note: this article has been crossposted all over the place, but it seems relevant to these groups, so I have taken the plunge and approved the posting to my group (s.b.e.), which has the effect of approving it for ALL the groups. If any other moderators are irritated about this, sorry....that's how inews works.... - JAH] Included is the full program for the ARTIFICIAL LIFE IV workshop, to be held at MIT, Cambridge, MA 6-8 July 1994. The registration form and hotel form are also included. Please forward this message to interested parties. We hope to see you there! Contents: 1. general information 2. program 3. registration information 4. hotel information 5. MIT housing and dining accomodations 6. miscellaneous information 7. registration form 8. hotel reservation form 9. MIT on-campus housing request ***********************1. GENERAL INFORMATION************************** ARTIFICIAL LIFE IV An Interdisciplinary Workshop on the Synthesis and Simulation of Living Systems July 6--8, 1994 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, MA 02139 USA Artificial Life complements the traditional Biological sciences, concerned with the analysis of living organisms, by attempting to synthesize phenomena normally associated with natural living systems within computers and other "artificial" media. By extending the empirical foundation upon which the science of Biology rests beyond the carbon-chain based life that has evolved on Earth, Artificial Life can contribute to Theoretical Biology by locating "life-as-we-know-it" within the larger context of "life-as-it-could-be." The three previous workshops in this series were held in Santa Fe, New Mexico. This year's workshop, held primarily at Kresge Auditorium on the MIT campus, is intended to continue in the spirit of the earlier events, encouraging people with a broad range of backgrounds to share and exchange opinions, ideas, and techniques. Papers and posters will be presented, and registrants will have the opportunity to sign up for a tour of either the Artificial Intelligence Lab or the Media Lab, the afternoon of July 7. Participation in the tours is limited, however, and will be on a first-come, first-served basis. There will be five daytime sessions with plenary talks and parallel paper presentations, an evening session on Wednesday the 6th, and on Thursday afternoon there will be poster sessions, demonstrations, panels, and small meetings. Plenary speakers include: Chris Langton on the state of ALIFE Katsunori Shimohara on ALIFE research in Japan Luc Steels on `emergence' Jack Szostak on RNA-based evolution in a beaker Wednesday evening we will have a set of talks and panels on SETI, the search for extraterrestial life. We will have the leaders of the two major efforts in the US, Paul Horowitz from Harvard and Jill Tarter from the SETI Institute (just recently spun off from NASA). Both these efforts involve simultaneously scanning many frequencies from radio telescope searches of the sky, looking for signs of intelligent life. Between ALIFE and SETI we will be covering all forms of life not of natural Earth-based biological origin. The proceedings will be published by MIT Press. A loose-leaf version will be provided to all registrants at the conference. Approximately two months following the conference, all registrants will receive a bound copy from the MIT Press by surface mail. For up to date information and announcements refer to "Events at the AI Lab" under the home page for the MIT AI Lab on the World Wide Web (at http://www.ai.mit.edu/). For questions or more information email alife@ai.mit.edu. ***************************2. PROGRAM********************************** WEDNESDAY, JULY 6 _______________________________________ 8:30 Plenary talk --- Chris Langton "Artificial Life: The State of the Art" _______________________________________ Session 1: 5 long papers 9:30 Demetri Terzopoulos, Xiaoyuan Tu and Radek Grzeszczuk, "Artificial Fishes with Autonomous Locomotion, Perception, Behavior, and Learning in a Simluated Physical World" 10:00 Karl Sims, "Evolving 3D Morphology and Behavior by Competition" _______________________________________ 10:30 coffee break _______________________________________ 11:00 David H. Ackley and Michael L. Littman, "Altruism in the Evolution of Communication" 11:30 Hiroaki Kitano, "Evolution of Metabolism for Morphogenesis" 12:00 Craig W. Reynolds, "Competition, Coevolution and the Game of Tag" _______________________________________ 12:30 lunch _______________________________________ 1:30 Plenary talk --- Katsunori Shimohara "Evolutionary Systems for Brain Communications" _______________________________________ Session 2(a): 5 long papers 2:30 Horst Hendriks-Jansen, "In Praise of Interactive Emergence, or Why Explanations Don't Have to Wait for Implementations" 3:00 Peter Godfrey-Smith, "Spencer and Dewey on Life and Mind" ______________________________________ 3:30 coffee break _______________________________________ 4:00 Gene Levinson, "Crossovers Generate Non-Random Recombinants Under Darwinian Selection" 4:30 Jan Paredis, "Steps Towards Co-Evolutionary Classification Neural Networks" 5:00 Wolfgang Banzhaf, "Self-organisation in a system of binary strings" _______________________________________ Session 2(b): 7 short papers 2:30 Robert M. French and Adam Messinger, " Genes, Phenes and the Baldwin Effect: Learning and Evolution in a Simulated Population" 2:50 Kurt Thearling and Thomas S. Ray, "Evolving Multi-cellular Artificial Life" 3:10 Kazuhiro Saitou and Mark J. Jakiela, "Meshing of Engineering Domains by Meitotic Cell Division" _______________________________________ 3:30 coffee break _______________________________________ 4:00 Hiroaki Inayoshi, "Simulating Natural Spacing Patterns of Insect Bristles Using a Network of Interacting Celloids" 4:20 Lijia Zhou and Stan Franklin, "Character Recognition Agents" 4:40 Eric Bonabeau, Guy Theraulaz, Eric Arpin and Emmanuel Sardet, "The Building Behavior of Lattice Swarms" 5:00 Jari Vaario, "Modeling Adaptive Self-Organization" _______________________________________ 5:30 dinner _______________________________________ 7:30 Jill Tarter and Paul Horowitz---SETI _______________________________________ 9:00 MIT Press Reception 10:30 ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ THURSDAY, JULY 7 _______________________________________ 8:30 Plenary talk --- Jack Szostak "Towards the In Vitro Evolution of an RNA Replicase" _______________________________________ Session 3(a): 5 long papers 9:30 I.J.A. Te Boekhorst and P. Hogeweg, "Effects of Tree Size on Travel Band Formation in Orang-utans: Data Analysis Suggested by a Model Study" 10:00 Jeffrey O. Kephart, "A Biologically Inspired Immune System for Computers" _______________________________________ 10:30 coffee break _______________________________________ 11:00 Yukihiko Toquenaga, Isamu Kajitani and Tsutomu Hoshino, "Egrets of a Feather Flock Together" 11:30 C.C. Maley, "A Model of the Effects of Dispersal Distance on the Evolution of Virulence in Parasites" 12:00 John Batali, "Innate Biases and Critical Periods: Combining Evolution and Learning in the Acquisition of Syntax" _______________________________________ Session 2(b): 7 short papers 9:30 Jessica K. Hodgins and David C. Brogan, "Robot Herds: Group Behaviors for Systems with Significant Dynamics" 9:50 Michael de la Maza and Deniz Yuret, "A Futures Market Simulation with Non-Rational Participants" 10:10 Tatsuo Unemi, Masahiro Nagayoshi, Nobumasa Hirayama, Toshiaki Nade, Kiyoshi Yano and Yashuhiro Masujima, " Evolutionary Differenciation of Learning Abilities--a case study on optimizing parameter values in Q-learning by a genetic algorithm" _______________________________________ 10:30 coffee break _______________________________________ 11:00 Steve Bankes, "Exploring the Foundations of Artificial Societies: Experiments in Evolving Solutions to Iterated N-player Prisoner's Dilemma" 11:20 John Batali and Philip Kitcher, "Evolutionary Dynamics of Altruistic Behavior in Optional and Compulsary Versions of the Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma" 11:40 Michael Oliphant, "Evolving Cooperation in the Non-Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma: The Importance of Spatial Organization" 12:00 Peter J. Angeline, "An Alternate Interpretation of the Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma and the Evolution of Non-Mutual Cooperation" ______________________________________ 12:30 lunch _______________________________________ 1:30 General interest talks: Thomas Ray (digital game reserve) and Stefan Helmreich (anthropology) _______________________________________ 2:30 Session 4: Posters & Demos (with coffee) 4:00 _______________________________________ 5:00 AI Lab & Media Lab Tours 6:30 _______________________________________ 7:00 Clambake ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ FRIDAY, JULY 8 _______________________________________ 8:30 Plenary talk --- Luc Steels "Emergent functionality of robot behavior through on-line evolution" _______________________________________ Session 5(a): 5 long papers 9:30 Kazuo Hosokawa, Isao Shimoyama and Hirofumi Miura, "Dynamics of Self-Assembling Systems --Analogy with Chemical Kinetics--" 10:00 R. Beckers, O.E. Holland and J.L. Deneubourg, "From Local Actions to Global Tasks: Stigmergy and Collective Robotics" ______________________________________ 10:30 coffee break _______________________________________ 11:00 Stefano Nolfi, Dario Floreano, Orazio Miglino and Francesco Mondada, "How to Evolve Autonomous Robots: Different Approaches in Evolutionary Robotics" 11:30 Michael Patrick Johnson, Pattie Maes and Trevor Darrell, "Evolving Visual Routines" 12:00 Filippo Menczer and Richard K. Belew, "Evolving Sensors in Environments of Controlled Complexity" _______________________________________ Session 5(b): 7 short papers 9:30 Hirofumi Doi, Ken-nosuke Wada and Mitsuru Furusawa, "Asymmetric Mutations Due to Semiconservative DNA Replication: Double-stranded DNA Type Genetic Algorithms" 9:50 P. Marchal, C. Piguet, D. Mange, A. Stauffer and S. Durand, "Embryological Development on Silicon " 10:10 Hitoshi Hemmi, Jun'ichi Mizoguchi and Katsunori Shimohara, "Development and Evolution of Hardware Behaviors" ______________________________________ 10:30 coffee break _______________________________________ 11:00 Chris Adami and C. Titus Brown, "Evolutionary Learning in the 2D Artificial Life System "Avida" " 11:20 Hugues Bersini and Vincent Detours, "Asynchrony Induces Stability in Cellular Automata Based Models" 11:40 Murray Shanahan, "Evolutionary Automata" 12:00 Moshe Sipper, "Non-Uniform Cellular Automata: Evolution in Rule Space and Formation of Complex Structures" ______________________________________ 12:30 lunch _______________________________________ Session 6(a): 5 long papers 1:30 Kai Nagel and Steen Rasmussen, "Traffic at the Edge of Chaos" 2:00 James F. Lynch, "A Phase Transition in Random Boolean Networks" 2:30 Frank Dellaert and Randall D. Beer, "Toward an Evolvable Model of Development for Autonomous Agent Synthesis" 3:00 Mark A. Bedau and Alan Bahm, "Bifurcation Structure in Diversity Dynamics" 3:30 Chris Adami, "On Modelling Life" _______________________________________ Session 6(b): 7 short papers 1:30 James V. Stone, "Evolutionary Robots: Our Hands In Their Brains?" 1:50 Alvaro Moreno, Arantza Etxeberria and Jon Umerez, "Universality Without Matter?" 2:10 Vince Darley, "Emergent Phenomena and Complexity" 2:30 Markus F. Peschl, "Autonomy vs. Environmental Dependency in Neural Knowledge Representation" 2:50 Takuya Saruwatari, Yukihiko Toquenaga and Tsutomu Hoshino, "Adiversity: Stepping Up Trophic Levels" 3:10 Nicholas Gessler, "Artificial Culture" 3:30 Jeffrey Ventrella, "Explorations in the Emergence of Morphology and Locomotion Behavior in Animated Characters" *******************3. REGISTRATION INFORMATION************************ The Registration fee for the Conference is $250 if paid before May 1, and $300 if paid after that date. The student rates are $150 before May 1 and $200 after that date. The fees for persons registering on-site will be $350 and $250 for students. Persons registering at the student rate should send a photocopy of his/her current student identification with the registration form and payment; an identification will also be required upon arrival. This fee includes admission to all conference sessions, materials, daily refreshments, a reception, a clambake, and the workshop proceedings. To register for the Conference please complete and return the enclosed form with payment to the MIT Conference Services Office, Room 7-111, Cambridge, MA 02139-4307 USA. The fee may be paid by check or money order made payable in US currency to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology or via credit card with the appropriate information provided. Persons paying via Mastercard or Visa may do so via fax at 617-253-7002. Your registration will be confirmed upon receipt. Details regarding on-site registration and transportation directions will be included with the registration confirmation. Cancellations received in writing prior to June 15 will be entitled to a refund less a $35 processing fee; no refunds will be granted after that date. Substitutions may be made until the start of the Conference. ******************4. HOTEL ACCOMODATION INFORMATION******************** A block of rooms has been reserved at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, 575 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA Telephone: 617-492-1234; Fax: 617-491-6906. The Hyatt is located along the Charles River on the west end of the campus within a 15-minute walk to the Conference meeting rooms. The Hyatt offers two restaurants and a health club with swimming pool, and parking is available at $12 per day. The Hyatt also offers scheduled complimentary shuttle service to and from campus as well as other Cambridge points and downtown Boston; please see the guest services desk upon arrival for schedule times. The Conference rate is $135 per night/single and $155 per night/double plus applicable taxes. Room availability and rate are guaranteed only until June 5. To secure your reservations, please return the attached hotel reservation form directly to the Hyatt Regency. ***************5. MIT HOUSING AND DINING ACCOMODATIONS**************** MIT has single and double dormitory rooms located in five non-airconditioned buildings along the Charles River. These buildings are located in close proximity to the meeting and dining room the Conference will be using. There are shared baths by floor. Rooms are furnished with twin-size beds, blanket, pillow, towels, desk lamp, and closet. Irons and fans are available at the front desk. Rooms are serviced each day (towels changed, waste receptacles emptied) and linens are changed weekly. Guest rooms have telephones which allow outgoing campus, local and long-distance (collect or credit card) calls and all incoming calls. Messages are taken by the front desk and posted in the lobby as well. All buildings are elevator equipped. Each building has vending machines and coin-operated laundry machines on the lower level. There are lounge areas available for informal gatherings; refridgerators are located in many of these areas. ********************6. MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION********************** Check-in is 3:00pm and the front desk staff is available from 8:00am to 12:00 midnight daily for late check-ins; check-out is 11:00am. Luggage may be stored at the front desk on the day of departure. Rates for guests of this conference are as follows: The evenings of Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday (July 5--7) will be inclusive of breakfast and lunch on the following days (Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday/July 6--8) in the Johnson Athletics Center. The rates for these evenings are $60 per night for single accomodations; $96 per night for double accomodations ($48 per person, per night for guests who elect to share a room with another conference participant); and $28 per night for children between the ages of 6 and 14. Children over the age of 14 are subject to the full single and/or double rate. Conference Services will match roommates for guests who want to take advantage of the shared double rate but do not have a specific person with whom they can share a room. Rooms are available beginning on Sunday, July 3 and guests may extend their stay beyond the dates of the Conference as rooms are available. Nights either before the 5th or after the 7th are exclusive of any meals. Rates for evenings preceding the 5th or following the 7th of July for guests of the Conference will be charged as follows: $39 per night for single accomodations; $54 per night for double accomodations; and $10 per night for a cot (children between the ages of 6 and 14 only). Reservations must be received by June 22, and payment is required at the time of the reservation. Requests received after June 22 will be accepted on a space available basis only. All requests should be sent directly to the MIT Conference Services Office. Rooms not paid in full prior to July 1 are subject to cancellation. MIT will send each guest a written confirmation indicating in which building they will be housed; this confirmation must be presented to the desk staff upon arrival. MIT retains the right to refuse entry to guests without proper identification. Cancellations will be accepted and refunded in full if received in writing by 5:00 pm on Friday, July 1. Cancellations received after that date will be subject to a one-night penalty if received in writing 24 hours prior to the reserved date of arrival. No cancellations will be refunded after that date, and no refunds will be granted for nights the dormitory rooms are not occupied during a reservation period or missed meals during the Conference. Parking ------- A limited number of parking spaces are available for persons registering for on-campus housing (only). If you will require a permit, please indicate this on the on-campus housing/dining request form, and the permit will be sent with your confirmation. There is a $10 non-refundable fee. Persons staying at the Hyatt Regency Hotel are encouraged to walk or utilize the Hyatt's shuttle service to campus. Recreation ---------- A variety of athletic facilities are available on campus including swimming, tennis, and squash. Athletic passes may be purchased on arrival at the registration desk. Sightseeing ----------- Boston and Cambridge offer a wide variety of daytime and evening activities, boasting a unique combination of tradition and trend. Historic Faneuil Hall and Quincy Marketplace---with their many fascinating shops, craft stands and restaurants---are popular gathering places for both area residents and visitors. Copley Place, along with the newly renovated Prudential Center, adds a contemporary dimension to Boston's traditional Copley Square and Back Bay. Attractions of particular interest to visitors include the USS Constitution, the John F. Kennedy Library, the Museum of Science and the Museum of Fine Arts. The historic Freedom Trail takes the visitor from the Boston Common through the popular markets of the North End and the Waterfront districts. Harvard Square, the Cambridge Common and the University Museums are but a few of the points of interest on the MIT side of the Charles River. Questions --------- Inquiries regarding local arrangements may be directed to the MIT Conference Services Office at 617-253-1700 or via Fax at 671-253-7002. Questions regarding the program should be directed to Professor Rodney Brooks at 617-253-0073 (Fax 617-253-0039). Rodney Brooks/Alife IV MIT Artificial Ingelligence Lab 545 Technology Square Cambridge, MA 02139, USA alife@ai.mit.edu ***********************7. REGISTRATION FORM*************************** ARTIFICIAL LIFE IV July 6--8, 1994 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Please note---this form must be printed out and returned with payment to: MIT Conference Services Office Room 7-111 Cambridge, MA 02139-4307 USA telephone: 617-253-1700 fax: 671-253-7002 Name____________________________________________________________________ Affiliation_____________________________________________________________ Address_________________________________________________________________ City_____________________________State/Province_________________________ Zip/Postal Code__________________Country________________________________ Telephone________________________Fax____________________________________ Electronic Mail Address_________________________________________________ If you have any special needs, please describe__________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ If you wish to attend a tour, please indicate your preference: Participation is on a first-come, first-served basis. ______AI Lab ______Media Lab REGISTRATION FEES: STUDENT FEES: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Before May 1 $250 Before May 1 $150 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ After May 1 $300 After May 1 $200 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ On-Site Registration $350 On-Site Registration $250 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total Enclosed $ ------------------------------------------------------------------------- ______Check or Money Order made payable to MIT is enclosed. ______Credit Card: ______Mastercard ______Visa Account Number___________________________Expiration Date________________ Cardholder's Name_______________________________________________________ Signature_______________________________________________________________ (required for credit card transactions) **********************8. HOTEL RESERVATION FORM************************ ARTIFICIAL LIFE IV July 6--8, 1994 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Please note---this form must be printed out and returned to: Hyatt Regency Cambridge 575 Memorial Drive Cambridge, MA 02139 USA telephone: 617-492-1234 fax: 617-491-9609 Name____________________________________________________________________ Affiliation_____________________________________________________________ Address_________________________________________________________________ City_____________________________State/Province_________________________ Zip/Postal Code__________________Country________________________________ Telephone_______________________________________________________________ ________Single Room at $135 per night ________Double Room at $155 per night ________Additional Person(s) at $10 each person, per night Name(s) of Additional Person(s)_________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Check-in Time 4:00pm Check-out Time 12:00noon Arrival Date_______________________Time___________am/pm Departure Date_____________________Time___________am/pm Reservation held until 6:00pm unless accompanied by a deposit, or guaranteed with a credit card number, expiration date and signature. ______Hold until 6:00pm only ______Guaranteed by the following: Deposit of $_______________ ______American Express Account Number___________________________Expiration Date________________ Cardholder's Name_______________________________________________________ Signature_______________________________________________________________ ______Diner's Club Account Number___________________________Expiration Date________________ Cardholder's Name_______________________________________________________ Signature_______________________________________________________________ ______Carte Blanche Account Number___________________________Expiration Date________________ Cardholder's Name_______________________________________________________ Signature_______________________________________________________________ ______Mastercard Account Number___________________________Expiration Date________________ Cardholder's Name_______________________________________________________ Signature_______________________________________________________________ ______Visa Account Number___________________________Expiration Date________________ Cardholder's Name_______________________________________________________ Signature_______________________________________________________________ *******************9. MIT ON-CAMPUS HOUSING REQUEST******************** ARTIFICIAL LIFE IV July 6--8, 1994 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Please note---this form must be printed out and returned with payment to: MIT Conference Services Office Room 7-111 Cambridge, MA 02139-4307 USA telephone: 617-253-1700 fax: 671-253-7002 Name____________________________________________________________________ Affiliation_____________________________________________________________ Address_________________________________________________________________ City_____________________________State/Province_________________________ Zip/Postal Code__________________Country________________________________ Telephone________________________Fax____________________________________ ACCOMODATIONS ------------- Arrival day/date_________________Departure day/date_____________________ Nights of July 5, 6 and 7: Nights before July 5 or after July 7: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ___Single Room at $60/night ___Single Room at $39/night ___Full Double Room at $96/night ___Full Double Room at $54/night Name of Guest____________________________________________________________ ___Shared Double Room with ___Shared Double Room with roommate at $48/night roommate at $27/night Name of Roommate________________________________________________________ ___Shared Double Room with ___Shared Double Room with assigned roommate at $48/night assigned roommate at $27/night I am ___male ___female ___smoker ___non-smoker ___Cots for children between ___Cots for children between the ages of 6 and 14 at the ages of 6 and 14 at $28 per child $10 per child Ages of Children____________________Ages of Children____________________ _______I will need a parking permit while on campus ($10 nonrefundable fee) Total for Housing $ Total for Parking $ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total Enclosed $ ------------------------------------------------------------------------- ______Check or Money Order made payable to MIT is enclosed. ______Credit Card: ______Mastercard ______Visa Account Number___________________________Expiration Date________________ Cardholder's Name_______________________________________________________ Signature_______________________________________________________________ (required for credit card transactions) **********************************************************************