Self-Replication via Tile Self-Assembly
Andrew Alseth, Daniel Hader, Matthew J. Patitz

TL;DR
This paper introduces the STAM* model, an advanced tile self-assembly framework that enables self-replication of shapes and genomes, with potential insights into natural replication and complexity reduction.
Contribution
The paper presents a new 3D, flexible-bond tile assembly model and demonstrates universal, self-replicating systems capable of shape and genome duplication.
Findings
Universal tile set can produce infinite shape copies at scale factor 2.
Hierarchical assembly reduces genome size significantly.
Systems can encode and deconstruct target shapes and genomes.
Abstract
In this paper we present a model containing modifications to the Signal-passing Tile Assembly Model (STAM), a tile-based self-assembly model whose tiles are capable of activating and deactivating glues based on the binding of other glues. These modifications consist of an extension to 3D, the ability of tiles to form "flexible" bonds that allow bound tiles to rotate relative to each other, and allowing tiles of multiple shapes within the same system. We call this new model the STAM*, and we present a series of constructions within it that are capable of self-replicating behavior. Namely, the input seed assemblies to our STAM* systems can encode either "genomes" specifying the instructions for building a target shape, or can be copies of the target shape with instructions built in. A universal tile set exists for any target shape (at scale factor 2), and from a genome assembly creates…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDNA and Biological Computing · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence · Cellular Automata and Applications
