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Joe Bolte
Bio [2006] Joe was born and lived the first 18 years of his
life in West Virgina, most notably in its highest incorporated town
(pop. 600). Just before enrolling at St. John's
College in Annapolis, he was able to travel around the United States for six
weeks and is proud to say that he has been to 42 states and
counting. After one year at St. John's, he transferred to the University of Chicago,
where he worked in a neurophysiology lab and later a particle
detection lab. He graduated with a major in Physics and a minor in
Classical Studies, and soon after expatriated to South America. He
spent three months in Chile, working on a computational investigation
of the Jarzynski
Equality, but he found the weather much more agreeable in Buenos
Aires, Argentina, where he spent another eight months. Joe was recently
recalled to the land of the free and the home of the brave to start
working for Wolfram
Research after informing Dr. Wolfram of a
terrible premonition he had in his sleep. He occasionally
maintains his own
website.
Project Title
Improved Visualization of Cellular Automata and Other Arrays
Project Finding the clearest visualization of the output of
even the simplest programs is a difficult matter. Even when the
input's encoding and the output's decoding are trivial, and the
function of the program is well understood, the computation's detailed
operation may be obscured by aspects of the system used to visualize
the process. By considering a series of examples of machines whose
computation is well understood, I propose to study possible
visualizations of systems whose input, output, and operation are all well
understood, with two goals. The first is simply to create clearer
representations of these systems, as learning tools for those who are
not already familiar with them. The second, and more difficult, goal
is to try to discover some general principle about the visual
representation of simple programs' input, output, and operation that
could lead to better tools for analyzing the behavior of systems that
are still poorly understood.
I'll start with developing a clearer demonstration of the
prime-generating CA displayed on page 640 of A New Kind of
Science, as well as an analysis of the advantages of my
refinement.
Favorite Four-Color, Radius-1/2 Rule
Rule chosen: 214256865
Four-color, 1/2-range cellular automaton rule 214256865 with random initial
conditions.
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