
Ed Meier
Bio [2005]
Ed Meier was born in Detroit, Michigan, and raised in its suburb of
Southfield. After an "adventure" of living in Huntsville, Alabama, Ed
currently resides in Springfield, Ohio. Ed is married and has a
two-year-old daughter. Ed spent 20 years as a professional software
developer: Ed has written banking software, geographic information
systems, terrain-modeling software, ATM (automatic teller machine)
driver software (including the finite-state machine), and Air Force
logistics systems. Ed's proudest accomplishment is that at each
company he has worked for, he has solved the "impossible"
problem--the one that others shied away from due to complexity or
length, or it was just inconceivable that it could be done. Ed is the
one who attempted to use CA to beat the Mega Millions lotto game. (He
didn't win.) Ed applied genetics-based machine learning to search for
the proper sequence of CA rules to find a specific output bit string,
and continues to explore NKS as a hobby. Ed received his bachelor's
degree from Central Michigan University in 1984.
Project Title
Using NKS to Visualize Documents
Project

The goal of this project was to explore NKS-based approaches
to visualize and interpret documents. Finding one
methodology to visualize all types of documents is
challenging. Not only do types of documents differ in their
style, but the English language is fraught with inferences.
Context-dependent meanings are difficult for a computer to
process efficiently.
The first experiment was to see the similarity between the plots of CA
output interpreted as words and actual documents. The next experiment
was to explore the plots of documents where each sentence was plotted
as its own graph. Words in common across sentences were plotted as
intersection points of the graphs. The last experiment explored the
possibility of using cellular automata that produce structure from
random initial conditions to organize documents.
Favorite Four-Color, Nearest-Neighbor, Totalistic Rule

Rule chosen: 49998
While this pattern does show a lot of symmetry of the right-left kind,
it has a good spread of numbers, is a class 3 (borderline 4), and
appears to have a minority of white spaces (which are not useful to
this problem), so it has the better chance of emulating a lotto game
compared to others turned up in this search. Plus it is visually
interesting in the "traditional" visual analysis of CAs.
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