Evolution of developmental ontogeny for robustly reproducible phenotypes

Rust, A.G., Adams, R.G., George, S. and Bolouri, H. (1998) Evolution of developmental ontogeny for robustly reproducible phenotypes. University of Hertfordshire.
Copy

Development has been used by a number of researchers as an efficient means of nonlinearly decoding genetic information is evolutionary systems. We show that developmental routines which do not utilise cell-cell interactions result in poor performance under noisy conditions. Addition of interactive rules permits self-organisation during development and produces robust mappings from genotype to phenotype even under noisy conditions. As a case study, we present the evolution of an edge-detecting artificial retina. The model is capable of creating three dimensional, multi-layer neural networks by modelling the development of neuron-to-neuron connectivity. Incorporating interactive overgrowth and pruning is shown to overcome the poor performance of intrinsic-only growth under noisy conditions. Staged evolution (speciation) of these processes is propose and demonstrated as an effective means of evolving such complex developmental programmes.

picture_as_pdf

picture_as_pdf
CSTR 317.pdf

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation METS MODS RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads