Flow-Lenia: Emergent evolutionary dynamics in mass conservative continuous cellular automata
This work addresses the problem of simulating open-ended evolution in artificial life for researchers in computational biology and AI, representing an incremental advancement over existing continuous cellular automata models.
The authors tackled the challenge of creating artificial life systems with emergent evolutionary dynamics by proposing Flow-Lenia, a mass-conservative extension of Lenia, which effectively generates spatially-localized patterns with complex behaviors and allows for multispecies simulations through embedded parameters.
Central to the artificial life endeavour is the creation of artificial systems spontaneously generating properties found in the living world such as autopoiesis, self-replication, evolution and open-endedness. While numerous models and paradigms have been proposed, cellular automata (CA) have taken a very important place in the field notably as they enable the study of phenomenons like self-reproduction and autopoiesis. Continuous CA like Lenia have been showed to produce life-like patterns reminiscent, on an aesthetic and ontological point of view, of biological organisms we call creatures. We propose in this paper Flow-Lenia, a mass conservative extension of Lenia. We present experiments demonstrating its effectiveness in generating spatially-localized patters (SLPs) with complex behaviors and show that the update rule parameters can be optimized to generate complex creatures showing behaviors of interest. Furthermore, we show that Flow-Lenia allows us to embed the parameters of the model, defining the properties of the emerging patterns, within its own dynamics thus allowing for multispecies simulations. By using the evolutionary activity framework as well as other metrics, we shed light on the emergent evolutionary dynamics taking place in this system.