Evolution of Heterogeneous Cellular Automata in Fluctuating Environments
David Medernach, Simon Carrignon, René Doursat, Taras Kowaliw, Jeannie Fitzgerald, Conor Ryan
Proceedings of the Artificial Life Conference 2016 (ALIFE 2016), Chapter 41
Abstract
The importance of environmental fluctuations in the evolution of living organisms by natural selection has been widely noted by biologists and linked to many important characteristics of life such as modularity, plasticity, genotype size, mutation rate, learning, or epigenetic adaptations. In artificial-life simulations, however, environmental fluctuations are usually seen as a nuisance rather than an essential characteristic of evolution. HetCA is a heterogeneous cellular automata characterized by its ability to generate open-ended long-term evolution and “evolutionary progress”. In this paper, we propose to measure the impact of different types of environmental fluctuations in HetCA. Our results indicate that environmental changes induce mechanisms analogous to epigenetic adaptation or multilevel selection. This is particularly prevalent in two of the tested fluctuation schemes, which involve a round-robin inhibition of certain cell types, where phenotypic selection seems to occur.
Authors & affiliations
- David Medernach — Biocomputing and Developmental Systems (BDS), University of Limerick, Ireland *
- Simon Carrignon — Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC), Catalonia, Spain · ICREA-Complex Systems Lab, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
- René Doursat — Informatics Research Centre (IRC), Manchester Metropolitan University, UK
- Taras Kowaliw
- Jeannie Fitzgerald — Biocomputing and Developmental Systems (BDS), University of Limerick, Ireland
- Conor Ryan — Biocomputing and Developmental Systems (BDS), University of Limerick, Ireland
* Corresponding author
Keywords
- cellular automata
- environmental fluctuations
- epigenetic adaptation
- multilevel selection
- artificial life
- HetCA