
Enrique Zeleny
Bio [2008]
Enrique Zeleny is a physicist from the Autonomous University of
Puebla, with a master's degree in quantum cosmology. He attended the
NKS Summer School 2005, with a project about causal networks generated
by Turing machines. He researched recursive sequences and Turing
machines, and prepared artwork for the NKS conferences in 2006 and
2007. Currently, he contributes
actively to The Wolfram
Demonstrations Project, with nearly a hundred Demonstrations in a
variety of subjects from designs for neckties and stalactite
formation to chaos in black holes, including some research in NKS
systems.
Project Title
Complexity in the Mathematica Language
Project
The goal is to find complex behavior with Partition, RotateLeft,
and Join,
and with other combinations of Mathematica primitives, that
alone only do simple tasks but combined can do weird things. Another
idea is this: given a set of inputs and outputs, which kinds of minimal
programs can produce the outputs from the inputs? And which programs
yield equivalent structures or compute the same functions or can be
reduced or emulated? Which of them are more powerful?. Visualizing the
evolution of trees (representing the expressions) in the evaluation
process can be a useful tool. This lead us to explore strange corners
of the Mathematica programming language.
Favorite Radius 3/2 Rule
Rule chosen: 44153
Rule 44153 shows three different kinds of behavior simultaneously.
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