Team:ETH Zurich/project/overview/summarysimple
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- | <h3 style="text-align:center"> You must be wondering where these patterns on snea snail shells come from. What if they would come from a simple rule, followed by all cells on the shell ? </h3> | + | <h3 style="text-align:center"> You must be wondering where these patterns on snea snail shells come from. What if they would come from a simple rule, followed by all cells on the shell ? For example in the picture below, you can see that the same kind of pattern appears, if every cell decides of its state (white or black) depending on the state of the 3 cells above it.</h3> |
Revision as of 12:48, 2 September 2014
You must be wondering where these patterns on snea snail shells come from. What if they would come from a simple rule, followed by all cells on the shell ? For example in the picture below, you can see that the same kind of pattern appears, if every cell decides of its state (white or black) depending on the state of the 3 cells above it.
As a matter of fact, many of the complex patterns you can see in nature come from simple rules. It is the case for hurricanes, flocks of birds, neural networks... We call this phenomenon emergence. Emergent phenomena are not predictable from the initial situation and this is why they surprise us. If you are interested in emergence of complexity in general, you can read more about the background of our project.