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Frederico Meinberg
Bio [2003]
At present Fred is completing an MA in Romance Linguistics at Freiburg
University, Germany. He describes his main activity in linguistics as
involving empirical research on grammatical structures across the world's
languages (so-called linguistic typology). Another of his projects is
the development of a Mathematica-based tool for doing corpus and
computational linguistics. Outside linguistics, some of his interests
are the implications of Stephen Wolfram's A New Kind of Science
to economics, the foundations of mathematics, and philosophy of science.
Fred is originally from Brazil and spends a small part of his time running
a farm there. Besides looking after his fitness with regular swimming,
cycling and visits to the gym, he enjoys trekking and horse riding in
the mountains of Minas Gerais state.
Project Title
Studying Simple Symbolic Systems
Abstract
My work in the NKS Summer School was concerned with so-called symbolic
systems. Wolfram (2002) presents symbolic systems as one class of simple
programs, besides cellular automata, Turing machines, register machines,
and others. The evolution of a symbolic system consists in the application
of a set of one or more rules of the form lhs -> rhs to an initial
expression. Following the directions set by Wolfram (2002), the simplest
forms of symbolic systems were investigated, in search for the threshold
of complex behavior. The parameters investigated were number of rules,
number of operators, and the size of lhs and rhs, as well as the size
of the initial conditions. It was found out that the threshold of complexity
is reached with rather small sizes of rules and initial conditions. Other
issues dealt with were how to visualize symbolic systems and how the evaluation
scheme used to apply the rules affects the evolution of the system.
Favorite 3-color Cellular Automata
Rule Chosen: 2476560193074
Additional Information
Meinberg F. "Studying Simple Symbolic Systems." Presentation at NKS 2004,
Boston, MA, 2004. [abstract]
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