01242nam a2200337 i 450099100077000970753620020507173350.0940504s1993 us ||| | eng 0824788184b10754817-39ule_instLE01302052ExLDip.to Matematicaeng516.36AMS 53-06AMS 53-XXQA641.C6144Komatsu, Gen534946Complex geometry :proceedings of the Osaka international conference /edited by Gen Komatsu, Yusuke SakaneNew York :Marcel Dekker,c1993vii, 229 p. ;26 cmLecture notes in pure and applied mathematics,0075-8469 ;143Includes bibliographical refernces and indexDifferential geometryCongressesFunctions of complex variablesCongressesSakane, Yusuke.b1075481723-02-1728-06-02991000770009707536LE013 53-XX KOM11 (1993)12013000128757le013-E0.00-l- 03030.i1084895228-06-02Complex geometry911288UNISALENTOle01301-01-94ma -engus 0104405nam 22007935 450 991014414860332120250730110228.03-540-48304-710.1007/3-540-48304-7(CKB)1000000000548775(SSID)ssj0000320881(PQKBManifestationID)11231143(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000320881(PQKBWorkID)10259299(PQKB)10294196(DE-He213)978-3-540-48304-5(MiAaPQ)EBC3063727(MiAaPQ)EBC6489880(PPN)155185136(EXLCZ)99100000000054877520121227d1999 u| 0engurnn#008mamaatxtccrAdvances in Artificial Life 5th European Conference, ECAL'99, Lausanne, Switzerland, September 13-17, 1999 Proceedings /edited by Dario Floreano, Jean-Daniel Nicoud, Francesco Mondada1st ed. 1999.Berlin, Heidelberg :Springer Berlin Heidelberg :Imprint: Springer,1999.1 online resource (XVIII, 742 p.)Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence,2945-9141 ;1674Includes 1 sheet errata.3-540-66452-1 Includes bibliographical references and index.Keynote Lectures -- Epistemology -- Evolutionary Dynamics -- Evolutionary Cybernetics -- Bio-inspired Robotics and Autonomous Agents -- Self-Replication, Self-Maintenance, and Gene Expression -- Societies and Collective Behaviour -- Communication and Language.No matter what your perspective is, what your goals are, or how experienced you are, Artificial Life research is always a learning experience. The variety of phe nomena that the people who gathered in Lausanne reported and discussed for the fifth time since 1991 at the European Conference on Artificial Life (ECAL) has not been programmed, crafted, or assembled by analytic design. It has evolved, emerged, or appeared spontaneously from a process of artificial evolution, se- organisation, or development. Artificial Life is a field where biological and artificial sciences meet and blend together, where the dynamics of biological life are reproduced in the memory of computers, where machines evolve, behave, and communicate like living organ isms, where complex life-like entities are synthesised from electronic chromo somes and artificial chemistries. The impact of Artificial Life in science, phi losophy, and technology is tremendous. Over the years the synthetic approach has established itself as a powerful method for investigating several complex phenomena of life. From a philosophical standpoint, the notion of life and of in telligence is continuously reformulated in relation to the dynamics of the system under observation and to the embedding environment, no longer a privilege of carbon-based entities with brains and eyes. At the same time, the possibility of engineering machines and software with life-like properties such as evolvability, self-repair, and self-maintainance is gradually becoming reality, bringing new perspectives in engineering and applications.Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence,2945-9141 ;1674Artificial intelligenceAutomatic controlRoboticsAutomationBioinformaticsComputer scienceArtificial IntelligenceControl, Robotics, AutomationComputational and Systems BiologyTheory of ComputationArtificial intelligence.Automatic control.Robotics.Automation.Bioinformatics.Computer science.Artificial Intelligence.Control, Robotics, Automation.Computational and Systems Biology.Theory of Computation.570.113Nicoud Jean-DanielMondada FrancescoFloreano DarioEuropean Conference on Artificial Life.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910144148603321Advances in Artificial Life772208UNINA