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Transactions on Computational Systems Biology X

  • Book
  • © 2008

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 5410)

Part of the book sub series: Transactions on Computational Systems Biology (TCSB)

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Table of contents (9 chapters)

  1. Biological and Biologically-Inspired Communication

Keywords

About this book

Technology is taking us to a world where myriads of heavily networked devices interact with the physical world in multiple ways, and at many levels, from the globalInternetdowntomicroandnanodevices. Manyofthesedevicesarehighly mobile and autonomous and must adapt to the surrounding environment in a totally unsupervised way. A fundamental research challenge is the design of robust decentralized c- puting systemsthat arecapableofoperating in changing environmentsandwith noisy input, and yet exhibit the desired behavior and response time, under c- straints such as energy consumption, size, and processing power. These systems should be able to adapt and learn how to react to unforeseen scenarios as well as to display properties comparable to social entities. The observation of nature has brought us many great and unforeseen concepts. Biological systems are able to handle many of these challenges with an elegance and e?ciency far beyond currenthumanartifacts. Basedonthisobservation,bio-inspiredapproacheshave been proposed as a means of handling the complexity of such systems. The goal is to obtain methods to engineer technical systems, which are of a stability and e?ciency comparable to those found in biological entities. This Special Issue on Biological and Biologically-inspired Communication contains the best papers from the Second International Conference on Bio- Inspired Models of Network, Information, and Computing Systems (BIONET- ICS 2007). The BIONETICS conference aims to bring together researchers and scientistsfromseveraldisciplines incomputerscienceandengineeringwhereb- inspired methods are investigated, as well as from bioinformatics, to deepen the information exchange and collaboration among the di?erent communities.

Editors and Affiliations

  • The Microsoft Research, University of Trento, Centre for Computational and Systems Biology, Povo (TN), Italy

    Corrado Priami

  • Department of Computer Science, University of Erlangen, Erlangen, Germany

    Falko Dressler

  • Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey

    Ozgur B. Akan

  • School of Computer Science, University of Windsor, Windsor, Canada

    Alioune Ngom

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