Workshop on Self-organization in Representations for Evolutionary Algorithms, 2nd, at GECCO in Washington on June 25-29, 2005



From: Ivan Garibay (igaribay@mail.ucf.edu)
Date: Thu Dec 09 2004 - 22:07:24 CET


               Workshop Announcement and Call for Papers

        Second Workshop on Self-organization in Representations for
 Evolutionary Algorithms: Building complexity from simplicity
                 http://ivan.research.ucf.edu/SOEA-2005.htm

                       to be held as part of the
          Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference (GECCO)
                          Washington,D.C. USA
                 June 25-29, 2005 (Saturday - Wednesday)
                    http://www.isgec.org/gecco-2005/

Papers submission deadline: 14 March, 2005 (email: igaribay@cs.ucf.edu)

The success of Evolutionary Algorithms (EAs) on a wide range of
otherwise intractable problems has promoted its use. As EAs are
applied to increasingly difficult problems that require increasingly
complex solutions, they face a number of problems: premature convergence
to suboptimal solutions, stagnation of search in large search spaces,
negative epistatic effects, disruption of large building blocks, and
scalability, among others. Nature evolves instructions in the form of
genes that are used to specify the construction of organisms using a
highly non-linear process: development.
Self-organization is fundamental to the developmental process at all
levels: molecular, genetic, and cellular. With new reports of the
number of genes in the human genome being revised downwards, the role
of self-organization in complex webs of gene regulation is all the
more salient. Given these new findings, perhaps the self-organization
of genotypic instructions that transform genotype to phenotype is a
key missing ingredient necessary for unleashing the evolution of complex
and scalable solutions with emergent phenomena such as: scale-free-ness,
adaptability, innovation, evolvability, and robustness. This workshop will
focus on domain-independent methods for representing complex solutions
with self-organizable building blocks, and on developmental principles
for specifying the construction of complex systems. This workshop welcomes
submissions from computer science and engineering, as well as from
biologists on relevant topics that may help shed light on self-organizing
principles for evolutionary computation.

Topics of interest include:

* Models of complexity building using self-organization
* Emergent behavior in representations
* Methods of design and evaluation of self-organizable representational
  building blocks
* Scalability of self-organizational processes to high complexities
* Self-organization theoretical approaches: complexity, chaos, synergetics,
  self-organized criticality, non-equilibrium thermodynamics, etc.
* Self-organized development
* Genotype-phenotype mappings for self-organization and single & multicellular
  development
* Pattern formation, morphogenesis, cellular differentiation, and growth
* Models of genetic regulatory networks, modularity, segmentation, and
  compartmentalization
* Scalability & Evolvability of developmental processes
* Robustness, self-repair and regeneration in developmental processes
* Real world applications of developmental principles

Workshop Format:

This workshop seeks to bring together researchers from diverse problem domains
to informally discuss issues related to the representation of complex solutions
using self-organization of simple building blocks for evolutionary algorithms
in particular, and the issue of building complexity from simplicity in general.
We welcome technical papers describing completed or on-going research as well
as position papers outlining current research issues, approaches or research
agendas. We also welcome suggestions to panel discussions. Preprints will be
circulated by email prior to the meeting.

Workshop Submission Instructions:

The style of the paper should follow the GECCO 2005 Workshops guidelines.
Authors are requested to submit their papers in electronic form (postscript
or PDF) via email to: igaribay@cs.ucf.edu. Accepted papers will be published
in the GECCO-2005 CD-ROM.

Important Dates:

Submission Deadline: 14 March, 2005
Author Notification: 8 April, 2005
Camera-Ready Deadline: 22 April, 2005
 
Attendance: Open to all GECCO 2005 attendees

Organizers:

 Ivan I. Garibay*, Sanjeev Kumar**, Ozlem Garibay* and Hal Stringer*
 * Evolutionary Computation Laboratory - University of Central Florida
 ** Krasnow Institute for Advanced Studies - George Mason University

Program Committee:

Josh Bongard, Sibley School of Mech. and Aerospace Eng., Cornell University
Peter Eggenberger, Dept. of Computer Science, University of Zurich
Gregory Hornby, Computational Sciences Div. at NASA Ames Research Center,
Ivan Garibay, School of Computer Science, University of Central Florida
Ozlem Garibay, School of Computer Science, University of Central Florida
Sanjeev Kumar, Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study, George Mason University
W. B. Langdon, Computer Science, University College, London
Joseph Lewis, Computer Science Department, San Diego State University
Julian Miller, Department of Electronics, University of York
Tim Otter, Department of Biology, Albertson College of Idaho
Paul Wiegand, Naval Research Labs. Washington D.C.
Annie Wu, School of Computer Science, University of Central Florida

For more information, comments or suggestions please email Ivan Garibay at
igaribay@cs.ucf.edu or visit http://ivan.research.ucf.edu/SOEA-2005.htm



 
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