purl.org/peter.turney

Turney - Artificial Life

  1. Ewaschuk, R., and Turney, P. (2006), Self-replication and self-assembly for manufacturing, Artificial Life, 12, 411-433. (NRC #48760)

    [arXiv Abstract] [arXiv PDF] [Cogprints Abstract] [Cogprints PDF] [Source Code]

  2. Ewaschuk, R., and Turney, P. (2005), Self-Replicating Strands that Self-Assemble into User-Specified Meshes, National Research Council, Institute for Information Technology, Technical Report ERB-1121. (NRC #47442)

    [arXiv Abstract] [arXiv PDF] [Cogprints Abstract] [Cogprints PDF] [Source Code]

  3. Smith, A., Turney, P., and Ewaschuk, R. (2003), Self-replicating machines in continuous space with virtual physics, Artificial Life, 9, 21-40. (NRC #44969)

    [arXiv Abstract] [arXiv PDF] [Cogprints Abstract] [Cogprints PDF] [Source Code]

  4. Smith, A., Turney, P., and Ewaschuk, R. (2002), JohnnyVon: Self-Replicating Automata in Continuous Two-Dimensional Space, National Research Council, Institute for Information Technology, Technical Report ERB-1099. (NRC #44953)

    [arXiv Abstract] [arXiv PDF] [Cogprints Abstract] [Cogprints PDF] [Source Code]

  5. Turney, P.D. (2000), A simple model of unbounded evolutionary versatility as a largest-scale trend in organismal evolution, Artificial Life, 6, 109-128. (NRC #43672)

    [arXiv Abstract] [arXiv PDF] [Cogprints Abstract] [Cogprints PDF] [Source Code]

  6. Turney, P.D. (1999), Increasing evolvability considered as a large-scale trend in evolution, Proceedings of the 1999 Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference (GECCO-99) Workshop Program, pp. 43-46. (NRC #43583)

    [arXiv Abstract] [arXiv PDF] [Cogprints Abstract] [Cogprints PDF]

Updated: February 3, 2007.