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ALIFE 2009: Nashville, TN, USA
- 2009 IEEE Symposium on Artificial Life, ALIFE 2009, Nashville, TN, USA, March 30-31, 2009. IEEE 2009, ISBN 978-1-4244-2763-5

Major Transitions in Evolution
- Nicolas Oros, Chrystopher L. Nehaniv

:
Dude, where is my sex gene? - Persistence of sex over evolutionary time in cellular automata. 1-8 - Gregg T. Vesonder:

Mechanisms affecting the evolution of evolvability. 9-12
Meaning, Information, Communication
- Joe Saunders, Caroline Lyon, Frank Förster

, Chrystopher L. Nehaniv
, Kerstin Dautenhahn
:
A constructivist approach to robot language learning via simulated babbling and holophrase extraction. 13-20 - Jan T. Kim, Daniel Polani:

Exploring Empowerment as a Basis for Quantifying Sustainability. 21-28 - Paul W. Schermerhorn, Matthias Scheutz

:
The impact of communication and memory in hive-based foraging agents. 29-36 - Patrick Grim:

Semantic content and pragmatic convention: Emergence through individual advantage in spatialized environments. 37-44 - Dorothée François, Kerstin Dautenhahn

, Daniel Polani:
Using real-time recognition of human-robot interaction styles for creating adaptive robot behaviour in robot-assisted play. 45-52
BioComputation and Genetic Regulatory Networks
- Hongliang Guo, Yan Meng, Yaochu Jin

:
Self-adaptive multi-robot construction using gene regulatory networks. 53-60 - Yaochu Jin

, Yan Meng, Bernhard Sendhoff
:
Influence of regulation logic on the easiness of evolving sustained oscillation for gene regulatory networks. 61-68
Embodiment, Behavior & Interaction
- Elshad Shirinov, Martin V. Butz

:
Distinction between types of motivations: Emergent behavior with a neural, model-based reinforcement learning system. 69-76 - John Christopher Murray

, Lola Cañamero
:
Developing preferential attention to a speaker: A robot learning to recognise its carer. 77-84 - Hiroki Sayama, Shelley D. Dionne

, Craig B. Laramee, David Sloan Wilson:
Enhancing the architecture of interactive evolutionary design for exploring heterogeneous particle swarm dynamics: An in-class experiment. 85-91 - Wesley R. Elsberry, Laura M. Grabowski, Charles Ofria

, Robert T. Pennock:
Cockroaches, drunkards, and climbers: Modeling the evolution of simple movement strategies using digital organisms. 92-99 - Benjamin E. Beckmann, Laura M. Grabowski, Philip K. McKinley, Charles Ofria

:
Applying digital evolution to the design of self-adaptive software. 100-107
Evolution and Development (Evo-Devo)
- Tüze Kuyucu, Martin Trefzer, Julian F. Miller, Andrew M. Tyrrell:

On the properties of artificial development and its use in evolvable hardware. 108-115 - Nicolas Oros, Volker Steuber

, Neil Davey, Lola Cañamero
, Rod Adams:
Evolution of bilateral symmetry in agents controlled by spiking neural networks. 116-123
Evolution and Ecology (Generalized Evo-Eco)
- Sherri Goings, Charles Ofria

:
Ecological approaches to diversity maintenance in evolutionary algorithms. 124-130 - Walter de Back

, George Kampis:
Emergence and analysis of complex food webs in an individual-based artificial ecology. 131-138 - Matthew Conforth, Yan Meng:

On the value of simple stoichiometry to ALife simulations using EcoSim. 139-146 - Nicole Doorly, Kira Irving, Gianna McArthur

, Keon Combie, Virginia Engel, Hassan Sakhtah, Elise Stickles, Hannah Rosenblum, Andres Gutierrez, Robert Root, Chun Wai Liew, John H. Long Jr.
:
Biomimetic evolutionary analysis: Robotically-simulated vertebrates in a predator-prey ecology. 147-154 - Jeffrey O. Pfaffmann:

Peak analysis for characterizing evolutionary behavior. 155-162
Multicellularity and Swarms
- Carsten Henneges, Stefan Huster, Andreas Zell:

An artificial t cell immune system for predicting MHC-II binding peptides. 163-170 - Joshua Brandoff, Hiroki Sayama:

Cultural transmission in robotic swarms through RFID cards. 171-178 - David Bowes

, Rod Adams, Lola Cañamero
, Volker Steuber
, Neil Davey:
The role of lateral inhibition in the sensory processing in a simulated spiking neural controller for a robot. 179-183 - Brian D. Connelly, Philip K. McKinley, Benjamin E. Beckmann:

Evolving cooperative pheromone usage in digital organisms. 184-191

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