Team:ETH Zurich/project/overview

From 2014.igem.org

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("The whole is more than the sum of its parts" 'Aristotle')
(Our project: Mosaicoli)
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According to cellular automata theory, emergent patterns offer a large panel of properties: striking examples are the rule 30 which gives an apparently random pattern and the rule 110 which has been proven to be Turing complete. With cellular automata, you cannot predict how the final pattern will look like even if you know the rule that governs its property. Thus the intricated computations of steps poses the problem of complexity.
According to cellular automata theory, emergent patterns offer a large panel of properties: striking examples are the rule 30 which gives an apparently random pattern and the rule 110 which has been proven to be Turing complete. With cellular automata, you cannot predict how the final pattern will look like even if you know the rule that governs its property. Thus the intricated computations of steps poses the problem of complexity.
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== Our project : Mosai''coli'' ==
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== Our project: Mosai''coli'' ==
=== Principle and Goals ===
=== Principle and Goals ===
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Second, we widen the scope of our investigation to other projects and disciplines, from scientific fields to philosophy, sociology or art. We address the issue of how to deal with complexity, by interviewing experts in several fields and conducting a larger scale study with a survey. Do these people consider that parts are strictly ordered, and try to reduce complexity to simple parts strictly following a set of deterministic rules, or do they accept that complexity comprises a mix of order and disorder, that a part of uncertainty cannot be neglected and that complex systems should be studied as a whole? Both approaches have their advantages and their drawbacks, which one should we choose to deal with the increasing complexity of our world?
Second, we widen the scope of our investigation to other projects and disciplines, from scientific fields to philosophy, sociology or art. We address the issue of how to deal with complexity, by interviewing experts in several fields and conducting a larger scale study with a survey. Do these people consider that parts are strictly ordered, and try to reduce complexity to simple parts strictly following a set of deterministic rules, or do they accept that complexity comprises a mix of order and disorder, that a part of uncertainty cannot be neglected and that complex systems should be studied as a whole? Both approaches have their advantages and their drawbacks, which one should we choose to deal with the increasing complexity of our world?
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Here is a more detailed list of subgoals :
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Here is a more detailed list of subgoals:
* Make a Sierpinski triangle pattern appear on a grid of bacteria
* Make a Sierpinski triangle pattern appear on a grid of bacteria
* Conjugate quorum sensing and logic gates in bacterial colonies
* Conjugate quorum sensing and logic gates in bacterial colonies

Revision as of 10:24, 12 August 2014

iGEM ETH Zurich 2014

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