ROApr 17, 2018

Artificial Plants - Vascular Morphogenesis Controller-guided growth of braided structures

arXiv:1804.06343v1
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work offers a novel approach for embedding artificial growth in physically embodied systems, potentially impacting fields like architecture, though it appears incremental in applying plant-inspired control to braided structures.

The paper tackles the challenge of scalable morphological adaptation in physical systems by introducing a novel modular approach that combines braided material continuity with a decentralized Vascular Morphogenesis Controller, enabling collective decision-making for growth and adaptation in embodied systems.

Natural plants are exemplars of adaptation through self-organisation and collective decision making. As such, they provide a rich source of inspiration for adaptive mechanisms in artificial systems. Plant growth - a structure development mechanism of continuous material accumulation that expresses encoded morphological features through environmental interactions - has been extensively explored in-silico. However, ex-silico scalable morphological adaptation through material accumulation remains an open challenge. In this paper, we present a novel type of biologically inspired modularity, and an approach to artificial growth that combines the benefits of material continuity through braiding with a distributed and decentralised plant-inspired Vascular Morphogenesis Controller (VMC). The controller runs on nodes that are capable of sensing and communicating with their neighbours. The nodes are embedded within the braided structure, which can be morphologically adapted based on collective decision making between nodes. Human agents realise the material adaptation by physically adding to the braided structure according to the suggestion of the embedded controller. This work offers a novel, tangible and accessible approach to embedding mechanisms of artificial growth and morphological adaptation within physically embodied systems, offering radically new functionalities, innovation potentials and approaches to continuous autonomous or steered design that could find application within fields contributing to the built environment, such as Architecture.

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