

Rodrigo Obando
Bio [2004]
Rodrigo Obando was born in San José, Costa Rica. After majoring
as an undergraduate in electrical engineering, he worked at several
places, including computer companies, a TV station, a telephone
company, and an airline. He completed his graduate work, M.E. and
Ph.D., at Old Dominion University. While pursuing his degrees, Rodrigo
worked with a research group at NASA Langley. There he worked in such
areas as robot vision, pattern recognition, vowel recognition,
fault-tolerant multicomputer operating systems, their implementation,
evaluation, simulation and mathematical models. Afterwards, Rodrigo
worked on a postdoctoral fellowship also at NASA Langley, where he
continued his work on fault-tolerant computing.
After that he worked for several companies as a consultant and later on he
started teaching information systems at Fairfield University. Rodrigo had
been doing research in information visualization in the areas of
distribution networks and performance evaluation of multivariate objects.
In 2002 he read Stephen Wolfram's A New Kind of Science and
found it too compelling to just sit and watch the show from the
sidelines. He started working in the mapping and characterization of
cellular automata rule spaces in 2003. Rodrigo presented preliminary
work at the inaugural NKS 2003 conference, submitted a paper to
the Journal of Complex Systems, and then presented more results
at the NKS 2004 conference.
Project Title Finding the Complex Rules in a 1D, k=2
Rule Space
Project
There has been great interest in the behavior of cellular automata
given a particular rule. I wish to extend some previous work performed
on the elementary cellular automata (ECA) rule space to the case where the
radius is 1½. This work indicates a possible way to locate the class 4
rules in a given rule space.
Researchers in cellular automata have regarded the rules as atomic in
the sense that they are the smallest element in doing experiments.
Instead I'd like to break the rules into primitives, even simpler
elements, to investigate the rule spaces and how these simpler
elements interact to produce interesting behavior. I hope this
will lead to some predictive capability that can be used with other
rule systems besides the cellular automata.
The crucial observation in the ECA was that the class 4 rules were
made out of primitives that belong to two special subsets of the
functions. There exist a set of monotone Boolean functions and its
complement that are called isotone and antitone functions,
respectively. One primitive of the rule belongs to the isotone set and
the other to the antitone. Not all combinations from these two sets
yield class 4 rules, but a structure seems to exist that holds all the
class 4 rules.
The preliminary map of the spaces with k=2, r=1a
needs to be completed to begin to understand how the different classes
of behavior are distributed in the space. The class 4 behavior seems
to be rare but nonetheless not totally unpredictable. The other
classes are also of interest since the characteristics needed for each
application vary widely. Other properties may also be mapped and
conclusions drawn from their distribution on the rule space.
Favorite two-color, radius-2 rule
Rule chosen: Nice class 4 equivalent class {1023212796, 2146467824,
3233857731, 4026658817}
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