next up previous contents
Next: About this document Up: The CAM/PC exerciser CAMEX Previous: Acknowledgements

References

1
Ivan Amato, ``Speculating in Precious Computronium,'' Science 253 856-857 (1991).

2
Bernard Barral, Hugues Chaté and Paul Manneville, ``Collective behaviors in a family of high-dimensional automata,'' Physics Letters A 163 279-285 (1992).

3
P. -M. Binder and V. Privman, ``Second-Order Dynamics in the Collective Temporal Evolution of Complex Systems,'' Physical Review Letters 68 3830-3833 (1992).

4
H. Chaté and P. Manneville, ``Evidence of Collective Behaviour in Cellular Automata,'' Europhysics Letters 14 409-413 (1991).

5
A. K. Dewdney, ``The hodgepodge machine makes waves,'' Scientific American, pages 86-89 (August, 1988).

6
A. K. Dewdney, ``Computer Recreations: The cellular automata programs that create wireworld, rugworld, and other diversions,'' Scientific American, pages 136-139 (January, 1990).

7
Richard Durrett and Jeffrey E. Steif, ``Some Rigorous Results for the Greenberg-Hastings Model,'' Journal of Theoretical Probability 4 669-690 (1991).

8
Irving R. Epstein, ``Spiral Waves in Chemistry and Biology,'' Science 252 cover + p. 67 (1991).

9
Marcel J. E. Golay, ``Hexagonal Parallel Pattern Transformations,'' IEEE Transactions on Computers C-18 733-740 (1969).

10
J. M. Greenberg and S. P. Hastings, ``Spatial patterns for discrete models of diffusion in excitable media,'' SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics 34 515-523 (1978).

11
J. M. Greenberg, B. D. Hassard, and S. P. Hastings, ``Pattern formation and periodic structures in systems modelled by reaction-diffusion equations,'' Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 84 1296-1327 (1978).

12
J. M. Greenberg, C. Greene, and S. Hastings, ``A combinatorial problem arising in the study of reaction-diffusion equations,'' SIAM Journal of Algebra and Discrete Mathematics 1 34-42 (1980).

13
Brian W. Kernighan and Dennis M. Ritchie, The C Programming Language, Prentice-Hall, Inc, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1978 (ISBN 0-13-110163-3).

14
Don Lancaster, ``TTL Cookbook,'' Howard W. Sams & Company, Indianapolis, Indiana, 1974 (ISBN 0-672-21035-5).

15
Harold V. McIntosh and Gerardo Cisneros, ``The programming languages REC and Convert,'' SIGPLAN Notices, 25 81-94 (July 1990).

16
Harold V. McIntosh, Linear Cellular Automata, classroom notes, Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, 1990 (194 pp).

17
James D. Murray, ``How the Leopard Gets its Spots,'' Scientific American, pages 62-69 (March, 1988).

18
William Poundstone, The Recursive Universe, William Morrow and Company, New York, 1985 (ISBN 0-688-03975-8).

19
Kendall Preston, Jr., ``Feature Extraction by Golay Hexagonal Pattern Transforms,'' IEEE Transactions on Computers C-20 1007-1014 (1971).

20
Kendall Preston, Jr. and Michael J. B. Duff, Modern Cellular Automata, Plenum Press, New York, 1984 (ISBN 0-306-41737-5).

21
Peter R. Rony, ``Introductory Experiments in Digital Electronics and 8080A Microcomputer Programming and Interfacing - Book 1,'' Howard W. Sams & Company, Indianapolis, Indiana, 1977 (ISBN 0-672-21550-0).

22
Tommaso Toffoli and Norman Margolis, Cellular Automata Machines, The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachussets, 1987. (ISBN 0-262-20060-0)

23
Arthur T. Winfree, ``Rotating Chemical Reactions,'' Scientific American, pages 82-95 (June, 1974).

24
A. T. Winfree, E. M. Winfree and H. Seifert, ``Organizing centers in a cellular excitable medium,'' Physica 17D 109-115 (1985).



Harold V. McIntosh
E-mail:mcintosh@servidor.unam.mx