Entropy 2012, 14(10), 1939-1952; doi:10.3390/e14101939
Programming Unconventional Computers: Dynamics, Development, Self-Reference
York Centre for Complex Systems Analysis, University of York, York, YO10 5DD, UK
Received: 23 August 2012 / Revised: 8 October 2012 / Accepted: 9 October 2012 / Published: 17 October 2012
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Selected Papers from Symposium on Natural/Unconventional Computing and Its Philosophical Significance)
Abstract
Classical computing has well-established formalisms for specifying, refining, composing, proving, and otherwise reasoning about computations. These formalisms have matured over the past 70 years or so. Unconventional Computing includes the use of novel kinds of substrates–from black holes and quantum effects, through to chemicals, biomolecules, even slime moulds–to perform computations that do not conform to the classical model. Although many of these unconventional substrates can be coerced into performing classical computation, this is not how they “naturally” compute. Our ability to exploit unconventional computing is partly hampered by a lack of corresponding programming formalisms: we need models for building, composing, and reasoning about programs that execute in these substrates. What might, say, a slime mould programming language look like? Here I outline some of the issues and properties of these unconventional substrates that need to be addressed to find “natural” approaches to programming them. Important concepts include embodied real values, processes and dynamical systems, generative systems and their meta-dynamics, and embodied self-reference. View Full-Text
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Stepney, S. Programming Unconventional Computers: Dynamics, Development, Self-Reference. Entropy 2012, 14, 1939-1952.