NELGCBMay 3, 2022

Growing Isotropic Neural Cellular Automata

arXiv:2205.01681v324 citationsh-index: 10
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a specific limitation in developmental biology modeling for researchers, offering an incremental improvement to existing NCA frameworks.

The authors tackled the limitation of anisotropy in Neural Cellular Automata (NCA) models for morphogenesis, proposing an Isotropic NCA (IsoNCA) that enables growth of asymmetrical patterns without external orientation, achieving accurate pattern generation through symmetry-breaking methods.

Modeling the ability of multicellular organisms to build and maintain their bodies through local interactions between individual cells (morphogenesis) is a long-standing challenge of developmental biology. Recently, the Neural Cellular Automata (NCA) model was proposed as a way to find local system rules that produce a desired global behaviour, such as growing and persisting a predefined target pattern, by repeatedly applying the same rule over a grid starting from a single cell. In this work, we argue that the original Growing NCA model has an important limitation: anisotropy of the learned update rule. This implies the presence of an external factor that orients the cells in a particular direction. In other words, "physical" rules of the underlying system are not invariant to rotation, thus prohibiting the existence of differently oriented instances of the target pattern on the same grid. We propose a modified Isotropic NCA (IsoNCA) model that does not have this limitation. We demonstrate that such cell systems can be trained to grow accurate asymmetrical patterns through either of two methods: (1) by breaking symmetries using structured seeds or (2) by introducing a rotation-reflection invariant training objective and relying on symmetry-breaking caused by asynchronous cell updates.

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