"Defective" Logic: Using spatiotemporal patterns in coupled relaxation oscillator arrays for computation
Shakti N. Menon, Sitabhra Sinha

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how coupled relaxation oscillators with reaction-diffusion dynamics can perform universal computation by generating and transforming complex spatiotemporal patterns, including NAND logic, inspired by microfluidic experiments.
Contribution
It introduces continuous-state, continuous-time computational paradigms using reaction-diffusion oscillator arrays, bridging pattern formation with universal computation.
Findings
Demonstrated NAND logic implementation in oscillator arrays
Showed transformation of patterns to perform computation
Proposed potential for universal computation in reaction-diffusion systems
Abstract
An intriguing interpretation of the time-evolution of dynamical systems is to view it as a computation that transforms an initial state to a final one. This paradigm has been explored in discrete systems such as cellular automata models, where the relation between dynamics and computation has been examined in detail. Here, motivated by microfluidic experiments on arrays of chemical oscillators, we show that computation can be achieved in continuous-state, continuous-time systems by using complex spatiotemporal patterns generated through a reaction-diffusion mechanism in coupled relaxation oscillators. We present two paradigms that illustrate this computational capability, namely, using perturbations to (i) generate propagating configurations in a system of initially exactly synchronized oscillators, and (ii) transform one time-invariant pattern to another. In particular, we have…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Automata and Applications · Nonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation · Slime Mold and Myxomycetes Research
