Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2076979 Biosystems 2007 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Noise and component failure is an increasingly difficult problem in modern electronic design. Bio-inspired techniques is one approach that is applied in an effort to solve such issues, motivated by the strong robustness and adaptivity often observed in nature. Circuits investigated herein are designed to be tolerant to faults or robust to noise, using an evolutionary algorithm. A major challenge is to improve the scalability of the approach. Earlier results have indicated that the evolved circuits may be suited for the application of artificial development, an approach to indirect mapping from genotype to phenotype that may improve scalability. Those observations were based on the genotypic complexity of evolved circuits. Herein, we measure the genotypic complexity of circuits evolved for tolerance to faults or noise, in order to uncover how that tolerance affects the complexity of the circuits. The complexity is analysed and discussed with regards to how it relates to the potential benefits to the evolutionary process of introducing an indirect genotype–phenotype mapping such as artificial development.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Modelling and Simulation
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