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Luís F. Simões

Image evolution - 5 views

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    A very simple, but very creative application of evolution! Try it with your images. You can read about the first implementation of this kind here: http://developers.slashdot.org/developers/08/12/09/0238252.shtml
Luís F. Simões

Picbreeder: Collaborative Interactive Art Evolution (Genetic Art) - 1 views

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    Following up on our coffee-time discussion, here's an Evolutionary Algorithm where you are the fitness function, and evolution is guided by your subjective artistic sense. Start from scratch, or pick an existing image in the database, and start evolving. At every generation, you are presented with the individuals/images in the population. Pick the ones you like. Those will be the parents from which the next generation will be bred. Repeat, repeat... where do you get to? If you want to learn more about the science behind this, check the tutorial below by Kenneth Stanley, who is also this site's supervisor: http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1830761.1830920
Dario Izzo

paper shoving the advantages of morphological changes during artificial evolution - 2 views

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    Might be worth looking at for our project on evolution of gaits at different gravity level
Juxi Leitner

Darwin's - 0 views

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    An international team of biochemists have discovered evidence at the molecular level in support of one of the key tenets of Darwin's theory of evolution that provides a blueprint for a general understanding of the evolution of the "machinery" of...
evo ata

Future Human Evolution - 1 views

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    Scientific and speculative articles about the future of human evolution regarding to artificial intelligence, genetic engineering, transhumanism, nanotechnology, space colonization, time travel, life extension and human enhancement
jcunha

Chicken study reveals evolution can happen much faster than thought - 2 views

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    "A new study of chickens overturns the popular assumption that evolution is only visible over long time scales. By studying individual chickens that were part of a long-term pedigree, the scientists led by Professor Greger Larson at Oxford University's Research Laboratory for Archaeology, found two mutations that had occurred in the mitochondrial genomes of the birds in only 50 years."
Tom Gheysens

Microbes can influence evolution of their hosts - 1 views

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    interesting how the evolution theory is evolving maybe we could add this topic to the brainstorming session?
Ma Ru

IEEE Trans. Evolutionary Computation - Special Issue on Differential Evolution - 3 views

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    Dario - perhaps worth giving a look to be up-to-date... There's even an article "Improving Classical and Decentralized Differential Evolution with New Mutation Operator and Population Topologies". They quote our CEC paper, but not the ParCo.
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    Don't know if you have full text access, so here goes the quote: "Recently, Izzo et al. designed in [27] a heterogeneous asynchronous island model for DE. They considered five islands and five DE strategies (DE/best/1/exp, DE/rand/1/exp, DE/rand-to-best/1/exp, DE/best/2/exp, and DE/rand/2/exp), and studied five distributed DEs using the same DE strategy in all the islands, and a heterogeneous model with one different DE strategy in every island. As a result, the heterogeneous model is not outstanding, but performs as well as the others."
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    Isn't it a bit a paper-killing quote?
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    :) It's in the context of a review of the work that's been done about DE with island model in general, they don't evaluate. Pity they didn't refer to the ParCo article on topologies, as it was a bit more extensive and more focused on the method (as they do in the article) rather than on the problem (as was our CEC paper, if I recall well).
Francesco Biscani

Chernobyl fallout could drive evolution of 'space plants' - environment - 15 May 2009 -... - 0 views

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    Is this possibly relevant to tissue regeneration?
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    nice findings indeed ... this is one of the topics of research that I was contemplating to engage in after my PhD ...
ESA ACT

Ecology: Managing Evolving Fish Stocks -- Jorgensen et al. 318 (5854): 1247 -- Science - 0 views

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    Evolution live: Due to the fact that bigger fish have a higher chance of getting caught in fish nets, the average body size at when fish start reproduce is drastically decreasing.
ESA ACT

Being human: Conflict: Altruism's midwife : Article : Nature - 0 views

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    Might be an interesting source of inspiration for research on evolution, cooperation etc.
santecarloni

Computer Scientists Reproduce The Evolution of Evolvability - Technology Review - 1 views

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    Simulation explains the origin of one of nature's most important organising principles
Dario Izzo

A little bit of ACT and NVIDIA Goes to the Moon with CUDA and Tegra - 3 views

shared by Dario Izzo on 08 Dec 11 - No Cached
LeopoldS liked it
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    The famous Mars Rover Simulator was a piece of the Evolution in Robotic Island Ariadna!!!!! But again, its only an algorithm :) whats new?
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    Go Plymouth!
Tom Gheysens

New genes spring, spread from non-coding DNA - 0 views

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    looks like evolution is getting better and better understood
Luís F. Simões

Evolution of AI Interplanetary Trajectories Reaches Human-Competitive Levels - Slashdot - 4 views

  • "It's not the Turing test just yet, but in one more domain, AI is becoming increasingly competitive with humans. This time around, it's in interplanetary trajectory optimization. From the European Space Agency comes the news that researchers from its Advanced Concepts Team have recently won the Gold 'Humies' award for their use of Evolutionary Algorithms to design a spacecraft's trajectory for exploring the Galilean moons of Jupiter (Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto). The problem addressed in the awarded article (PDF) was put forward by NASA/JPL in the latest edition of the Global Trajectory Optimization Competition. The team from ESA was able to automatically evolve a solution that outperforms all the entries submitted to the competition by human experts from across the world. Interestingly, as noted in the presentation to the award's jury (PDF), the team conducted their work on top of open-source tools (PaGMO / PyGMO and PyKEP)."
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    We made it to Slashdot's frontpage !!! :)
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    Congratulations, gentlemen!
Dario Izzo

NASA Brings Earth Science 'Big Data' to the Cloud with Amazon Web Services | NASA - 3 views

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    NASA answer to the big data hype
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    "The service encompasses selected NASA satellite and global change data sets -- including temperature, precipitation, and forest cover -- and data processing tools from the NASA Earth Exchange (NEX)" Very good marketing move for just three types of selected data (MODIS, Landsat products) plus four model runs (past/projection) for the the four greenhouse gas emissions scenarios of the IPCC. It looks as if they are making data available to adress a targeted question (crowdsourcing of science, as Paul mentioned last time, this time climate evolution), not at all the "free scrolling of the user around the database" to pick up what he thinks useful, mode. There is already more rich libraries out there when it comes to climate (http://icdc.zmaw.de/) Maybe simpler approach is the way to go: make available the big data sets categorized by study topic (climate evolution, solar system science, galaxies etc.) and not by instrument or mission, which is more technical, so that the amateur user can identify his point of interest easily.
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    They are taking a good leap forward with it, but it definitely requires a lot of post processing of the data. Actually it seems they downsample everything to workable chunks. But I guess the power is really in the availability of the data in combination with Amazon's cloud computing platform. Who knows what will come out of it if hundreds of people start interacting with it.
johannessimon81

Weather patterns on Exoplanet detected - 1 views

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    so it took us 70% of the time Earth is in the habitable zone to develop, would this be normal or could it be much faster? In other words, would all forms of life that started on a planet that originated at a 'similar' point in time like us, be equally far developed?
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    That is actually quite tricky to estimate rly. If for no other reason than the fact that all of the mass extinctions we had over the Earth's history basically reset the evolutionary clock. Assuming 2 Earths identical in every way but one did not have the dinosaur wipe-out impact, that would've given non-impact Earth 60million years to evolve a potential dinosaur intelligent super race.
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    The opposite might be true - or might not be ;-). Since usually the rate of evolution increases after major extinction events the chance is higher to produce 'intelligent' organisms if these events happen quite frequently. Usually the time of rapid evolution is only a few million years - so Earth is going quite slow. Certainly extinction events don't reset the evolutionary clock - if they would never have happened Earth gene pool would probably be quite primitive. By the way: dinosaurs were a quite diverse group and large dinosaurs might well have had cognitive abilities that come close to whales or primates - the difference to us might be that we have hands to manipulate our environment and vocal cords to communicate in very diverse ways. Modern dinosaur (descendents), i.e. birds, contain some very intelligent species - especially with respect to their body size and weight.
LeopoldS

HP Labs' Central Nervous System for the Earth project aims to build a planetwide sensin... - 4 views

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    is it worth having another look at this smart dust evolution? anybody interested?
santecarloni

Three-Dimensional Plasmon Rulers - 0 views

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    "Plasmon rulers can be used to determine nanoscale distances within chemical or biological species. They are based on the spectral shift of the scattering spectrum when two plasmonic nanoparticles approach one another.... We demonstrated a three-dimensional plasmon ruler that is based on coupled plasmonic oligomers in combination with high-resolution plasmon spectroscopy. This enables retrieval of the complete spatial configuration of complex macromolecular and biological processes as well as their dynamic evolution."
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