CGNEPSDec 13, 2018

Lenia - Biology of Artificial Life

arXiv:1812.05433v390 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work presents a novel artificial life system that could inform biology and AI, though it is incremental in the context of cellular automata research.

The authors introduced Lenia, a continuous cellular automaton system that generates diverse, complex autonomous patterns resembling microscopic organisms, with over 400 species identified across 18 families.

We report a new system of artificial life called Lenia (from Latin lenis "smooth"), a two-dimensional cellular automaton with continuous space-time-state and generalized local rule. Computer simulations show that Lenia supports a great diversity of complex autonomous patterns or "lifeforms" bearing resemblance to real-world microscopic organisms. More than 400 species in 18 families have been identified, many discovered via interactive evolutionary computation. They differ from other cellular automata patterns in being geometric, metameric, fuzzy, resilient, adaptive, and rule-generic. We present basic observations of the system regarding the properties of space-time and basic settings. We provide a broad survey of the lifeforms, categorize them into a hierarchical taxonomy, and map their distribution in the parameter hyperspace. We describe their morphological structures and behavioral dynamics, propose possible mechanisms of their self-propulsion, self-organization and plasticity. Finally, we discuss how the study of Lenia would be related to biology, artificial life, and artificial intelligence.

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