default search action
Ubiquity, Volume 2013
Volume 2013, Number January, January 2013
- David B. Fogel:
Ubiquity symposium: Evolutionary computation and the processes of life: evolutionary computation and evolutionary game theory: expecting the unexpected. 1:1-1:6 - Peter J. Denning:
Ubiquity symposium: The science in computer science: performance analysis: experimental computer science at its best. 2:1-2:9
Volume 2013, Number February, February 2013
- Richard T. Snodgrass:
Ubiquity symposium: The science in computer science: broadening CS enrollments: an interview with Jan Cuny. 1:1-1:8 - Lukás Sekanina:
Ubiquity symposium: Evolutionary computation and the processes of life: evolutionary computation in physical world. 2:1-2:7
Volume 2013, Number March, March 2013
- Peter J. Denning:
Science and the spectrum of belief: an interview with Leonard Ornstein. 1:1-1:13 - Shawn Carlson:
Ubiquity symposium: The science in computer science: how to talk about science: five essential insights. 2:1-2:12 - Philip Yaffe:
Ubiquity symposium: The science in computer science: the sixteen character traits of science. 3:1-3:16
Volume 2013, Number April, April 2013
- Hector Zenil, James A. R. Marshall:
Ubiquity symposium: Evolutionary computation and the processes of life: some computational aspects of essential properties of evolution and life. 1:1-1:16
Volume 2013, Number May, May 2013
- Espen Andersen:
Ubiquity symposium: The science in computer science: why you should choose math in high school. 1:1-1:6 - Walter Riofrio:
Ubiquity symposium: Evolutionary computation and the processes of life: information, biological, and evolutionary computing. 2:1-2:10
Volume 2013, Number December, December 2013
- Darko Roglic:
Ubiquity symposium: Evolutionary computation and the processes of life: towards synthesis of computational life-like processes of functional and evolvable proto-systems via extending evolutionary computation. 1:1-1:11 - David H. Wolpert:
Ubiquity symposium: Evolutionary computation and the processes of life: what the no free lunch theorems really mean: how to improve search algorithms. 2:1-2:15 - Richard T. Snodgrass:
On experimental algorithmics: an interview with Catherine McGeoch and Bernard Moret. 3:1-3:14 - Walter F. Tichy:
Empirical software research: an interview with Dag Sjøberg, University of Oslo, Norway. 4:1-4:14 - Mark Burgin, Eugene Eberbach:
Ubiquity symposium: Evolutionary computation and the processes of life: perspectives and reality of evolutionary computation: closing statement. 5:1-5:12
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.