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Driven cellular automata, adaptation and the...
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Driven cellular automata, adaptation and the binding problem

Abstract

The binding problem in neurobiology and the synchronization problem in distributed systems address a fundamental question, namely how can a collection of computational units interact so as to produce a stable response to environmental stimuli. It is proposed that the synchronization of responses of a complex system to a transient stimulus, socalled transient synchronization, provides a solution to this problem. Evidence is presented from studies involving inhomogeneous, asynchronous, adaptive cellular automata in support of this contention. In the transient synchronization approach, information is encoded as a distribution of response patterns in a global pattern space. The activation of such information requires a dynamic interaction between the system and its environment. Information is implicit rather than explicit. This permits a several orders of magnitude improvement in storage capacity over current models.

Authors

Sulis W

Series

Lecture Notes in Computer Science

Volume

929

Pagination

pp. 824-840

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

January 1, 1995

DOI

10.1007/3-540-59496-5_346

Conference proceedings

Lecture Notes in Computer Science

ISSN

0302-9743
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