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- Q177140 subject Q7131110.
- Q177140 subject Q8713595.
- Q177140 abstract "Amorphous computing refers to computational systems that use very large numbers of identical, parallel processors each having limited computational ability and local interactions. The term Amorphous Computing was coined at MIT in 1996 in a paper entitled "Amorphous Computing Manifesto" by Abelson, Knight, Sussman, et al.Examples of naturally occurring amorphous computations can be found in many fields, such as: developmental biology (the development of multicellular organisms from a single cell), molecular biology (the organization of sub-cellular compartments and intra-cell signaling), neural networks, and chemical engineering (non-equilibrium systems) to name a few. The study of amorphous computation is hardware agnostic -- it is not concerned with the physical substrate (biological, electronic, nanotech, etc.) but rather with the characterization of amorphous algorithms as abstractions with the goal of both understanding existing natural examples and engineering novel systems.Amorphous computers tend to have many of the following properties: Implemented by redundant, potentially faulty, massively parallel devices. Devices having limited memory and computational abilities. Devices being asynchronous. Devices having no a priori knowledge of their location. Devices communicating only locally. Exhibit emergent or self-organizational behavior (patterns or states larger than an individual device). Fault-tolerant, especially to the occasional malformed device or state perturbation.".
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink coore97paradigms.pdf.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink j.biosystems.2014.09.010.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink tucson-talk.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink abelson.ppt.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink proto-isys-2006.pdf.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink old-talk.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink www.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink amorphous.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink activecells.html.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink joshuag.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink amorphous.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink self-repair.html.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink cacm-2000.html.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink tucson-talk.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink amorph-new.html.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink paper.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink rseam.pdf.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink ~rad.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink 5.htm.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink ~rweiss.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink AMORPHOUOS-COMPUTING-Examples-Mathematics-and-Theory-August2013.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink Progmat.
- Q177140 wikiPageExternalLink img0.htm.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q185429.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q192776.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q213713.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q21572913.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q7131110.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q7202.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q770584.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q7816496.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q83588.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q856634.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q8713595.
- Q177140 wikiPageWikiLink Q92981.
- Q177140 comment "Amorphous computing refers to computational systems that use very large numbers of identical, parallel processors each having limited computational ability and local interactions.".
- Q177140 label "Amorphous computing".