IBP-Laforia
1996/01:
Rapport de Recherche Laforia /
Laforia research reports
22 pages - Février/February 1996 -
Document en anglais.
PostScript : Ko /Kb
Titre / Title: Aging agents
Abstract : We are adopting Brooks and Wiley's (1988) view of evolution as an irreversible process capable of producing increasingly greater complexity at higher organizational levels. We depart from the hypothesis that the evolutionary force is intrinsic in the living system and is in reality a continuous senescence function leading gradually and unavoidably to death. We are therefore seeking a senescence function that favors social rather than solitary agents in terms of longevity without prespecifying in detail the agents' life span. We show that a senescence function relying on negative (destructive) feedback links from metabolism to program is in conformity with these specifications. We also show that senescence should affect all the regulation parameters of the agent and that the system remains non-manipulable and unpredictable as far as its life span is concerned. This senescence function favors the more "cognitive" agent models (the ones having additional regulation loops) and thus the emergence of organizations of higher order that have more elaborate social relations. Finally, we explore an abstract "cancer" phenomenon to show that it appears statistically as predicted, but for a given system it is impossible to deduce in advance the emergence or not of cancer.
Publications internes Laforia 1996 / Laforia research reports 1996