First International
Workshop on Morphogenetic Engineering
Complex Systems Institute,
Paris, June 19, 2009
This workshop aims to promote a new field of research
called "Morphogenetic Engineering", which will explore the artificial design and
implementation of autonomous systems capable of developing complex,
heterogeneous morphologies. A particular focus will be on the
programmability and
controllability of self-organizing complex
systems, properties that are often underappreciated in many
disciplines.
Authors are invited to submit a 1-page abstract on their
research, or on a review and discussion about any aspect of Morphogenetic
Engineering. Contributions may be original or already published (please specify
when submitting). Authors of outstanding works will be invited to collaborate to
a Springer book.
Keynote speaker:
Marco Dorigo (other keynote speakers to be
confirmed)
Organizing committee:
Rene Doursat,
Hiroki Sayama and
Olivier
MichelWorkshop Website:
http://www.iscpif.fr/MEW2009
Overview
Engineering products are
generally made of a number of unique, heterogeneous components, assembled in a
precise and complicated way, and work deterministically following the
specifications given by the designers. By contrast, self-organization in natural
systems (physical, biological, ecological) often depends on the repetition of
identical components and the stochasticity in their dynamics. These systems
produce nontrivial, yet relatively regular patterns or behaviors that can be
described with a small number of macroscopic variables.
One salient
exception is the morphogenesis of biological organisms. Morphogenetic processes
demonstrate the possibility of combining self-organization
and elaborate
structures. Organisms are made of segments and parts arranged in specific ways
that resemble the products of human inventiveness. Moreover, they self-assemble
in a decentralized fashion, under the precise control of genetic and epigenetic
information stored in the zygote. In other words, they are the examples of
programmable self-organization, a concept that has not been sufficiently
explored in complex systems science and engineering so far. How do biological
organisms achieve morphogenetic tasks so reliably? Can we export their
self-formation capabilities to engineered systems? What are principles and best
practices for the design and engineering of such morphogenetic systems?
Call for Abstracts
- Important Dates:
- Deadline for abstract submission: Monday,
March 23
- Notification of acceptance: Monday, April 6
- Deadline for registration: on a first-come, first-served basis, until
maximum capacity is reached
- Date of workshop: Friday, June 19
- Abstracts should be submitted electronically via the online Submission &
Registration system.
- The number of speakers is limited to 12 and the total number of attendees
to 40.
- Submissions will be reviewed based on their relevance to the workshop,
clarity, and overall quality.
- If you only want to attend without giving a presentation, please also
register via the online Submission &
Registration system.
- There
is no registration fee for this workshop.
Topics of Interest
The
topics that we anticipate will include, but are not limited to:
- New principles of morphogenesis in artificial systems
- Bio-inspiration from plant vs. animal development
- Programmability of self-organizing morphogenetic systems
- Indirect, decentralized control of morphogenetic systems
- Sensitivity to environmental/boundary conditions vs. endogenous drive
- Evolvability, by variations and selection, of morphogenetic systems
- Links with evolutionary computation, artificial embryogeny, "evo-devo"
approaches
- Swarm-based approaches to morphogenetic systems
- Design techniques for morphogenetic engineering
- Causalities between micro and macro properties of morphogenetic systems
- Physical implementations
- Applications to real-world problems (nanotechnologies, reconfigurable
robots, swarm robotics, complex networks, etc.)
- Philosophical issues on morphogenetic engineering
Program
The details of the program
will be announced once we have a list of scientists interested in presenting at
the workshop. All speakers will be asked to give relatively brief (around 30mn)
presentations about their models and/or views about such models. The workshop
will conclude with a round table discussion aiming to characterize this body of
research and its future prospects.