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E-raamat: Nonlinear Dynamics Perspective of Wolfram's New Kind of Science: (Volume VI) [World Scientific e-raamat]

(Univ Of California, Berkeley, Usa)
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This invaluable volume ends the quest to uncover the secret recipes for predicting the long-term evolution of a ring of identical elementary cells where the binary state of each cell during each generation of an attractor (i.e. after the transients had disappeared) is determined uniquely by the state of its left and right neighbors in the previous generation, as decreed by one of 256 truth tables. As befitting the contents aimed at school children, it was found pedagogically appealing to code each truth table by coloring each of the 8 vertices of a cubical graph in red (for binary state 1), or blue (for binary state 0), forming a toy universe of 256 Boolean cubes, each bearing a different vertex color combination.The corresponding collection of 256 distinct Boolean cubes are then segegrated logically into 6 distinct groups where members from each group share certain common dynamics which allow the long-term evolution of the color configuration of each bit string, of arbitrary length, to be predicted painlessly, via a toy-like gaming procedure, without involving any calculation. In particular, the evolution of any bit string bearing any initial color configuration which resides in any one of the possibly many distinct attractors, can be systematically predicted, by school children who are yet to learn arithmetic, via a simple recipe, for any Boolean cube belonging to group 1, 2, 3, or 4. The simple recipe for predicting the time-asymptotic behaviors of Boolean cubes belonging to groups 1, 2, and 3 has been covered in Vols. I, II, ..., V.This final volume continues the recipe for each of the 108, out of 256, local rules, dubbed the Bernoulli rules, belonging to group 4. Here, for almost half of the toy universe, surprisingly simple recipes involving only the following three pieces of information are derived in Vol. VI; namely, a positive integer , a positive, or negative, integer , and a sign parameter > 0, or < 0. In particular, given any color configuration belonging to an attractor of any one of the 108 Boolean cubes from group 4, any child can predict the color configuration after generations, without any computation, by merely shifting each cell bits to the left (resp. right) if > 0 (resp. < 0), and then change the color of each cell if < 0.As in the five prior volumes, Vol. VI also contains simple recipes which are, in fact, general and original results from the abstract theory of 1-dimensional cellular automata. Indeed, both children and experts from cellular automata will find this volume to be as deep, refreshing, and entertaining, as the previous volumes.
Dedication v
Preface vii
Volume VI
Chapter 1 Bernoulli στ-Shift Rules
1(144)
1 Introduction
1.1 Brief notes on Bernoulli στ-shift rules
5(2)
2 Basin Tree Diagrams, Omega-Limit Orbits and Space-Time Patterns
7(135)
2.1 Basin tree diagrams and portraits of the ω-limit orbits
7(76)
2.2 Space-time patterns of Bernoulli rules using the super string as initial string
83(59)
3 Robust and Nonrobust ω-Limit Orbits of Rules from Group 4
142(2)
3.1 Robust ω-limit orbits of rules from Group 4
142(1)
3.2 Nonrobust ω-limit orbits of rules from Group 4
143(1)
4 Concluding Remarks
144(1)
Chapter 2 More Bernoulli στ-Shift Rules
145(172)
1 Introduction
145(1)
2 Bernoulli στ-Shift Rules
146(146)
2.1 General aspects of the Bernoulli στ-shift rules
146(1)
2.2 Basin-tree diagrams and portraits of their ω-limit orbits
146(146)
2.3 Space-time patterns of Bernoulli rules using the superstring as initial state
292(1)
3 Robust and Nonrobust ω-Limit Orbits of Rules from Group 4
292(3)
3.1 Robust ω-limit orbits of rules from Group 4
293(1)
3.2 Non-robust ω-limit orbits of rules from Group 4
294(1)
3.3 Rules with multiple robust ω-limit orbits
294(1)
4 Summary of Elementary 1D Cellular Automata
295(21)
4.1 Boolean cubes, complexity index, and threshold of complexity
295(8)
4.2 Globally and quasi-globally equivalent rules
303(5)
4.3 Rotations and symmetries
308(1)
4.4 Classification of the local rules
309(1)
4.5 Fractality and quasi-ergodicity
309(3)
4.6 Isles of Eden and Omega-limit orbits
312(4)
5 Concluding Remarks
316(1)
Chapter 3 Remembrance of Things Past
317(180)
Vignettes from Volume I
318(28)
Vignettes from Volume II
346(40)
Vignettes from Volume III
386(15)
Vignettes from Volume IV
401(10)
Vignettes from Volume V
411(18)
Vignettes from Volume VI
429(13)
Vignettes of Metaphors from Biology, Cosmology, Physics, etc.
442(18)
Vignettes of 256 Boolean Cubes
460(37)
References
495(2)
Appendices
497(68)
Appendix I Correspondence between
Chapters from Edited Book and Papers from IJBC Journal
498(1)
Appendix II Useful and Generic Tables and Figures
499(18)
Appendix III Pages where 16 Exquisite Elementary CA Rules are Cited, Discussed, or Characterized
517(35)
Appendix IV Contents of Volumes I-VI
552(13)
Index 565
Leon Chua is a foreign member of the Academia Europea and a recipient of eight USA patents and 14 Docteur Honoris Causa. He has received numerous international awards, including the first IEEE Kirchhoff Award, the Neural Networks Pioneer Award, the Guggenheim Fellow Award, the Distinguished Professor Award at the Technische Universitat Munchen and the "Top 15 Cited Authors" Award based on the ISI Citation Index in Engineering from 1991 to 2001. When not immersed in science, he relaxes by searching for Wagner's leitmotifs, musing over Kandinsky's chaos, and contemplating Wittgenstein's inner thoughts.