SEApr 15

Towards Enabling An Artificial Self-Construction Software Life-cycle via Autopoietic Architectures

arXiv:2604.1393461.3h-index: 8
Predicted impact top 37% in SE · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For software engineering researchers, this paper outlines a visionary framework for autonomous software evolution, but it is purely conceptual with no empirical validation.

This position paper proposes a paradigm shift in the Software Development Life-Cycle (SDLC) by introducing self-construction mechanisms inspired by Artificial Life, using Autopoietic Architectures like Psi-Arch, to enable autonomous software evolution and maintenance. No concrete results are presented.

Software engineering research has focused on automating maintenance and evolution processes to reduce costs and improve reliability. The emergence of foundation models (FMs) with strong code understanding and reasoning abilities offers new opportunities for autonomous software behavior. Inspired by Artificial Life (ALife), we propose a fundamental shift in the Software Development Life-Cycle (SDLC) by introducing self-construction mechanisms that enable software to evolve and maintain autonomously. This position paper explores the potential of Autopoietic Architectures, specifically Psi-Arch, as a foundational framework for self-constructing software. We first analyze the limitations of traditional maintenance approaches and identify gaps in current SDLC automation. Subsequently, we outline the core challenges in achieving self-construction, including the integration of foundation-model-based reasoning units and the establishment of novel architectural paradigms. Although this paper does not present a definitive solution, it seeks to catalyze discourse and inspire research toward a new paradigm in software engineering, one in which self-constructing software represents the next frontier in SDLC automation.

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