

Wiktor Macura
Bio [2004]
Wiktor Macura was born in Poland in March 1990. He is currently a junior at the
University of Maryland, Baltimore County, majoring in Mathematics and
Computer Science. Beside his interest in computer graphics and artifical
intelligence, he also plays the flute and has a black belt in Tae Kwon
Do.
Project Title Extended Turing Machines
Project
A typical Turing machine consists of a "head" and a "tape." For every
instruction the head may be either in the read or write position (up
and down, respectively) and the head may either move left or right by
one step on the tape. Furthermore, the tape may only be written at the
head. I intend to study Turing machines where a particular slot
on the tape can only be in two states (in other words, two-color
Turing machines). However, for all of the 4096 programs, none of them
produce interesting behavior.
I intend to look into so-called n-jump Turing machines (temporary
name) where the head may move at most n steps in either direction per
step in the execution. The expected result is that a 2-jump Turing
machine will start to show interesting behavior. However, if this is
not the case then I will study successively larger jumps to see
where interesting behavior begins. Of particular interest is
attempting to explain why the behavior becomes complex with a
particular jump size.
Favorite two-color, radius-2 rule
Rule chosen: 195657
The most interesting two-color, range-2 Cellular Automaton I found was
rule 195657. The behavior appears to be generally random; however, the
left edge of the triangle is what makes this rule interesting (this is
for a base step of a single black cell). Also, for a base step of {1,
1} the automaton starts acting really funny.
It is interesting to note that a base step of {1, 1, 1} continues
producing interesting behavior while a base case of {1, 0, 1} does not
(a nested pattern). This is interesting because if we look at the
second step we see that it is in fact {1, 0, 1}; however, there is a
long line on the right. This seems to suggest that these lines are
important to the behavior of the rule.
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