[EvoGrid-news] London talk Wed 21 Oct & future presentations
Bruce Damer
bdamer at digitalspace.com
Mon Oct 19 01:33:29 UTC 2009
Dear EvoGrid-news list subscribers. Welcome to this brand-new list
reporting news of the Evolution Grid - Origin of Life Simulation project!
The first news item is to report that yours truly Bruce Damer will be
giving a talk on the EvoGrid at the SMARTlab, University of East
London/Docklands Campus this Wednesday October the 21st starting at
6pm. An image and PDF of the brochure is attached. Also find details below.
The speaking schedule for the EvoGrid project in 2009 and 2010 is
also listed below (subject to change). For these talks and all other
project updates see our constantly updating web site at:
http://www.evogrid.org
2009-2010 Public Talks
21 October 2009: SMARTlab
18 November 2009: SETI Institute Colloquium Series, Mountain View, CA
December 2009: UC San Diego/CALIT2 (TBD)
13 January 2010: Stanford Computer Systems Colloquium-EE380, Stanford
University, CA
April 2010: CONTACT, NASA Ames Research Center, CA
18-21 August 2010: IEEE Workshop on Games (TBD), Copenhagen, DK
19-23 August 2010: Alife XII, Odense, Denmark (TBD)
*** Details on October 21 talk ***
###
Bruce Damer on EvoGrid @ The SMARTlab, Oct 21, 6:15pm
The EvoGrid: Simulating An Origin of Life and Providing a
Technological Pathway for the Future of Life
A SMARTlab Show & Tell Seminar with Bruce Damer
6:15pm, October 21, 2009
Playroom, SMARTlab, University of East London (directions below)
Map & Directions: http://tinyurl.com/ye2v3l8
About the Presentation:
The EvoGrid is a worldwide, cross-disciplinary effort to create an
abstract, yet plausible simulation of the chemical origins of life on
Earth. One could think of this as an artificial origin of life
experiment. The strategy is to employ a large number of computers in
a grid to simulate a digital primordial soup along with a distributed
set of computers acting as observers looking into that grid. These
observers, modeled after the very successful @Home scientific
computation projects, will be looking for signs of emergent
complexity and reporting back to the central grid.
The EvoGrid will be staring very early along the path of emergence in
a phase one might call "prevolution" in that the fundamental
mechanisms supporting symbolic codings for replication (and evolution
through Darwinian Natural Selection) must in fact emerge from a
tabula rasa (ie: no engineer coded in a genetic system). The goal is
to set up conditions to enable observers to witness the emergence of
structures in space (rings, catalysts, containers/vesicles, simple
repeating strings) or reaction sequences in time (autocatalytic sets
for example) within the EvoGrid simulation. With this as a foundation
a ratcheting up of complexity may then occur, hopefully through
several plateaux.
Years in the future, the observing of entities which code their own
constructions and reproduction using an artificial genome would be a
major scientific breakthrough for emergence science and hopefully
shed light on the possible chemical origins of life on Earth. The
intellectual and computational breakthroughs will come through
optimizing the pathway for vectors of ever higher self organization
across the valleys of events of extremely low probability. In the
distant future, EvoGrids may provide a pathway for evolution of new
forms of life that could prove crucial for the survival of humanity
on Earth and for life to be projected beyond, into space. In the
shorter term, EvoGrids tuned to model the whole inner life of a cell
in real time may lead to cures for cancer and even ways to end aging.
About Bruce Damer:
Bruce Damer is the founder of Biota.org and the principal
investigator of the EvoGrid project. He was instrumental in
developing early user interfaces for personal computers working with
Elixir and Xerox in the 1980s, was an early pioneer and organizer of
the first virtual worlds featuring users as avatars in the 1990s, and
since 2000 has led projects for NASA to model space missions in 3D at
his company DigitalSpace.
Bruce started research on artificial life in the mid 1980s and over
the past decade organized the Digital Biota conference series. The
EvoGrid combines his 25 years of research, international networking
and patient waiting for adequate computing power. Bruce's work is
being undertaken as PhD research through the SMARTlab Digital Media Institute.
How to find SMARTlab, University of East London
The SMARTlab Digital Media Institute, Knowledge Dock Building
University of East London, Docklands Campus
4-6 University Way, London E16 2RD, UK
Tel: 0208 223 7823 (Administration Office)
Map & Directions: http://tinyurl.com/ye2v3l8
###
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