Quarterly (Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall)
128 pp. per issue
7 x 10, illustrated
Founded: 1993
ISSN 1064-5462
E-ISSN 1530-9185
2010 Impact Factor: 2.122
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Winter 2012, Vol. 18, No. 1, Pages 27-51
Posted Online December 19, 2011.
(doi:10.1162/artl_a_00048)
© 2011 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Optimal Seeding of Self-Reproducing SystemsAmor A. Menezes*,**University of California, Berkeley Pierre T. Kabamba†University of Michigan *Corresponding author. **Department of Bioengineering, University of California, Berkeley, Mailcode 3220, Stanley Hall, Room 176, Berkeley, CA 94720. E-mail: amenezes@berkeley.edu †Department of Aerospace Engineering, University of Michigan, 1320 Beal Avenue, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-2140. E-mail: kabamba@umich.edu
Abstract This article is motivated by the need to minimize the number of elements required to establish a self-reproducing system. One such system is a self-reproducing extraterrestrial robotic colony, which reduces the launch payload mass for space exploration compared to current mission configurations. In this work, self-reproduction is achieved by the actions of a robot on available resources. An important consideration for the establishment of any self-reproducing system is the identification of a seed, for instance, a set of resources and a set of robots that utilize them to produce all of the robots in the colony. This article outlines a novel algorithm to determine an optimal seed for self-reproducing systems, with application to a self-reproducing extraterrestrial robotic colony. Optimality is understood as the minimization of a cost function of the resources and, in this article, the robots. Since artificial self-reproduction is currently an open problem, the algorithm is illustrated with a simple robotic self-replicating system from the literature and with a more complicated self-reproducing example from nature.
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