Author:
Taylor Tim,Bedau Mark,Channon Alastair,Ackley David,Banzhaf Wolfgang,Beslon Guillaume,Dolson Emily,Froese Tom,Hickinbotham Simon,Ikegami Takashi,McMullin Barry,Packard Norman,Rasmussen Steen,Virgo Nathaniel,Agmon Eran,Clark Edward,McGregor Simon,Ofria Charles,Ropella Glen,Spector Lee,Stanley Kenneth O.,Stanton Adam,Timperley Christopher,Vostinar Anya,Wiser Michael
Abstract
We describe the content and outcomes of the First Workshop on Open-Ended Evolution: Recent Progress and Future Milestones (OEE1), held during the ECAL 2015 conference at the University of York, UK, in July 2015. We briefly summarize the content of the workshop's talks, and identify the main themes that emerged from the open discussions. Two important conclusions from the discussions are: (1) the idea of pluralism about OEE—it seems clear that there is more than one interesting and important kind of OEE; and (2) the importance of distinguishing observable behavioral hallmarks of systems undergoing OEE from hypothesized underlying mechanisms that explain why a system exhibits those hallmarks. We summarize the different hallmarks and mechanisms discussed during the workshop, and list the specific systems that were highlighted with respect to particular hallmarks and mechanisms. We conclude by identifying some of the most important open research questions about OEE that are apparent in light of the discussions. The York workshop provides a foundation for a follow-up OEE2 workshop taking place at the ALIFE XV conference in Cancún, Mexico, in July 2016. Additional materials from the York workshop, including talk abstracts, presentation slides, and videos of each talk, are available at http://alife.org/ws/oee1 .
Subject
Artificial Intelligence,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cited by
71 articles.
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