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Jacob West
Bio [2003]
Jacob West received his Bachelor's in Science in physics from the California
Institute of Technology. He is currently applying to graduate schools
and will continue pursuing theoretical physics in the fall of 2004. In
addition to physics, his intellectual interests include computation and
complexity, learning and intelligence, and large-scale networks (physical,
virtual, and social). Jake also enjoys motorcycles, martial arts, hiking,
camping, and music.
Project Title
Causally Invariant and Reversible General Substitution Systems
Abstract
For a network to be physically allowable, it must obey certain constraints
that are consistent with our observations of the natural world. Specifically,
the network must exhibit causal invariance such that the evolution of
the network is independent of the order in which the network rules are
applied. The network must also exhibit reversibility meaning that evolution
can be run both forward and backward in time, thus allowing for a consistent
history. Furthermore, the network rules must preserve the general structure
of the network as it evolves (to avoid spontaneous creation or destruction
of matter) but allow for perturbations of the network structure during
interactions between existing structures, as one would expect from the
general observations of particle physics. Dealing with arbitrary networks
is in general very difficult, and as a consequence we will focus here
on a particular simplified model for causal networks corresponding to
general substitution systems specifically designed to obey the rules required
by physically reasonable systems as described. Using these systems, we
will investigate which rules, initial conditions, or combinations therein
lead to persistent structures with the "signature of a particle.
Favorite 3-color Cellular Automata
Rule Chosen: 7451701393334
Reason: We have found several
very interesting nearest-neighbor 3 color
cellular automata by using the technique of randomly searching the entire
space of these systems. It is possible to use this approach here because
the likelihood of finding more complicated behavior among these systems
is far greater than say the 256 simplest nearest-neighbor 2 color cellular
automata, primarily because the slightly greater amount of complexity
in the rule sets leads to an astronomically larger number of possible
systems. Hence, we are able to avoid the far more computationally intensive
approach of exhaustive searches. Again, this is only possible because
we were looking for any form of "interesting" behavior among these systems
rather than more specific inquiries like what is the simplest rule that
leads to complicated behavior, or how many of these systems exhibit class
4 behavior; such questions can only be adequately answered with an exhaustive
search for the specific behavior in question. And finally, many of these
systems, including the ones discussed and many of those that were not,
are certainly deserving of further and more in-depth investigation.
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