Transcript proposal
Evolution - a Simulation
The theory of evolution, while at once powerful and farreaching, is admittedly a difficult topic to experiment upon.
Countless generations of living things over timescales of
millions of years make it next-to-impossible to observe.
Thankfully, modeling digital organisms inside a simulated
environment enables scientists to focus on the particular
aspects of evolution they wish to study, and to note parallels
between the transformations these life-forms can undertake
and those of their real-life counterparts. While we are not the
first to act upon this idea, we wish to use the advantages it
confers to study two areas of particular interest, and to come up
with answers that will hopefully contribute to those evolutionary
issues.
Alexander Liu
Eric Chang
Advisor: Professor Amit Sahai
Thursday, October 25, 2pm: 4750 Boelter Hall
Alex
Parthenogenesis
• Definition
• Parthenogenesis in real-world organisms
• Advantages and disadvantages
Experimentation
• What aspect of this trait are we examining,
and what kind of results do we hope to
achieve?
• How would mutation and selection factor
into the simulation?
• How would the characteristics of such
organisms be modeled?
How to model experiments
• Building the software framework
• Modeling the organisms and variations
within the population
• Representing parthenogenesis and how it
affects fitness
Tentative Timeline
Fall Quarter end: Have a working software framework with
within which we could implement our experiments. This
framework may have to be modified further on as fit as we
proceed.
Winter Quarter mid: Have at least the core experiments up
and running within the software model. Given unsatisfactory
results, revise (and rebuild) as needed. Otherwise, expand
upon existing project ideas in new directions.
Winter Quarter end: Ideally, have concrete, satisfactory
results with the core experiments. The software should be in its
final stages and able to simulate the experiments.
Spring Quarter mid: Possibly branch off in related directions
and act on our findings. Begin preparing discussion and paper
of our results.
Spring Quarter end: Completion of the project. All results
should have been finalized and any relevant findings set down.