DocumentCode
778285
Title
Computers are from Mars, organisms are from Venus
Author
Kim, Junbyong
Author_Institution
Yale Univ., New Haven, CT, USA
Volume
35
Issue
7
fYear
2002
fDate
7/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
25
Lastpage
32
Abstract
Biology and computer science share a natural affinity. Physicist Erwin Schrodinger envisioned life as an aperiodic crystal, observing that the organizing structure of life is neither completely regular, like a pure crystal, nor completely chaotic and without structure, like dust in the wind. Perhaps this is why biological information has never satisfactorily yielded to classical mathematical analysis. Machine computations combine elegant algorithms with brute-force calculations, which seems a reasonable approach to this aperiodic structure. Likewise, computing seeks to create a machine that can flexibly solve diverse problems. In nature, such plastic problem solving resides uniquely in the domain of organic matter. Thus, examining how organisms solve problems can lead to new computation and algorithm development approaches that devour the problems that are so easy to approach using a computer, yet so difficult to tackle in the laboratory. The paper discusses the two most successful uses of computers in biology, comparative sequence analysis and in silico cloning. It considers DNA computing and genetic algorithms
Keywords
biocomputing; biology computing; genetic algorithms; DNA computing; biological information; comparative sequence analysis; computer science; genetic algorithms; in silico cloning; machine computations; mathematical analysis; Biology computing; Chaos; Computer science; Mars; Mathematical analysis; Organisms; Organizing; Plastics; Problem-solving; Venus;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computer
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9162
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MC.2002.1016898
Filename
1016898
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