PROGRAMME



Monday, 24 May, 2004

09.00-10.00

Opening
 

Key note

EMERGENT SYNTHETIC APPROACHES TO REAL WORLD DILEMMAS

K. Ueda

Research into Artifacts, Center for Engineering, The University of Tokyo, Japan

10.00-10.30

Coffee

10.30-12.30

Session 1: Computational emergence – I
 

MODELING PHENOTYPIC AMBIGUITY AS A SOURCE OF EMERGENCE

M. Migita

Faculty of Education, Shiga University, Japan
 

EMERGENCE OUT OF INTERACTION: A PHENOTYPE BASED MODEL OF SPECIES EVOLUTION

G. Kampis1, L. Gulyas2

1 History and Philosophy of Science, Eötvös University, Budapest, Hungary

2 Computer and Automation Research Institute, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary
 

REFINEMENT AND EMERGENCE VERSUS DESIGN AND PREDETERMINATION

A. Lucny

Institute of Informatics, Faculty of Mathematics, Physics and Informatics, Comenius University and MicroStep-MIS, Ilkovica, Slovakia
 

A LANGUAGE THEORETIC APPROACH TO THE CRAWLERS’ PROBLEM

K. Lázár

Eötvös Lóránd University, Department of Information Systems, Budapest, Hungary

12.30-14.00

Lunch

14.00-15.30

Session 2: Networked structures

 

GENERATION OF ROBUST NETWORKS WITH OPTIMIZATION UNDER BUDGET CONSTRAINTS

L. Gulyás

Computation and Automation Research Institute, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary

 

A MODELING FRAMEWORK FOR NETWORKED STRUCTURES

V. Zaletelj, A. Sluga, P. Butala

Department of Control and Manufacturing Systems, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia

 

EMERGENT SYNTHESIS APPROACH TO TOOL MANAGEMENT

IN A MULTIPLE-SUPPLIER NETWORK

Teti, R., D’Addona, D.

Department of Materials and Production Engineering, University of Naples Federico II, Naples, Italy

15.30-16.00

Coffee

16.00-18.00

Session 3: Computational emergence – II

 

TEMPORAL CO-CREATION BETWEEN SELF AND OTHERS WITH MULTI-SENSORY INPUTS

T. Takenaka, T. Ogata, K. Ueda

Research into Artifacts, Center for Engineering, the University of Tokyo, Japan

 

ANALYSING THE EMERGING PROPERTIES OF GENETIC PROGRAMS THROUGH THE ITREES OF POPULATIONS

A. Ekárt

Computer and Automation Research Institute, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary

 

AREA ASSIGNMENT PROBLEM OF OPERATORS IN SELF-ORGANIZATION BASED FACILITY LAYOUT

M. Kobayashi1,3, N. Fujii2, T. Makita3, I. Hatono4, K. Ueda2, T. Taura1

1 Graduate School of Science and Technology, Kobe University, Japan

4 Information Science and Technology Center, Kobe University, Japan

2 Research into Artifacts, Center for Engineering, The University of Tokyo, Japan

3 Micro Systems Network Company, Sony Corporation, Japan

 

RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF INCREMENTAL GROWTH DESIGN SYSTEM FOR MECHANICAL PRODUCTS

Y. Bo1,2, H. Kezheng2, C. Hongwu2, L. Luning1

1 College of Mechanical Engineering, Jinan University, China

2 College of Mechanical Engineering, Shangdong University, China

19.00-22.00 Banquet




Tuesday, 25 May, 2004
 

09.00-10.30

Session 4: Planning & scheduling – I

 

EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH FOR SOLVING CELL FORMATION PROBLEM IN CELL MANUFACTURING

T. Mikac, Z. Car

Department of Production Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Rijeka, Rijeka, Croatia

 

A STUDY ON REACTIVE SCHEDULING SYSTEM BASED ON GENETIC ALGORITHM

Y. Tanimizu, T. Sakaguchi, N. Sugimura, K. Iwamura

College of Engineering, Osaka Prefecture University, Japan

 

CORRELATIONS BETWEEN EMERGENT SYNTHESIS CLASSES: DUE DATE BASED CONTROL AND PLANNING OF JOB SHOPS

A. Lengyel1,2, K. Ueda1

1 Research into Artifacts, Center for Engineering, The University of Tokyo, Japan

2 Hitachi PERL, Japan

10.30-11.00

Coffee

11.00-12.30

Session 5: Planning & scheduling – II

 

EMERGING CAPABILITIES IN INTELLIGENT AGENTS FOR FLEXIBLE PRODUCTION CONTROL

T. Scholz1, I. J. Timm1, P-O. Woelk2

1 University of Bremen, Center for Computing Technologies (TZI), Bremen, Germany

2 University of Hannover, Institute of Production Engineering and Machine Tools (IFW), Bremen, Germany

 

LEARNING AND COOPERATION IN A DISTRIBUTED MARKET-BASED PRODUCTION CONTROL SYSTEM

B. Cs.Csáji, L. Monostori, B. Kádár

Computer and Automation Research Institute, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary

 

AN APPROACH TO EVOLUTIONARY ROBOTICS PROBLEMS FROM THE GENETIC ALGORITHM WITH THE VARIABLE MUTATION RATE STRATEGY

Y. Katada1, K. Ohkura2, K. Ueda3

1 Graduate School of Science and Technology, Kobe University, Japan

2 Faculty of Engineering, Kobe University, Japan

3 Research into Artifacts, Center for Engineering, The University of Tokyo, Japan

12.30-14.00

Lunch

14.00-15.30

Session 6: Synthesis of Multi-Agents Systems

 

ANT COLONY ENGINEERING IN COORDINATION AND CONTROL: HOW TO ENGINEER AN EMERGENT SHORT-TERM FORECASTING SYSTEM

P. Valckenaers, B. S. Germain, P. Verstraete, Hadeli, C. Zamfirescu, H. Van Brussel

K.U.Leuven P.M.A., Leuven, Belgium

 

AUTONOMOUS SPECIALIZATION: AN APPROACH TO DYNAMIC ROLE ALLOCATION FOR A MULTI-ROBOT SYSTEM

K. Ohkura1, K. Ueda2

1 Kobe University, Japan

2 Research into Artifacts, Center for Engineering,  The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

 

A HOMOGENEOUS MOBILE ROBOT TEAM THAT IS FAULT-TOLERANT

T. Yasuda1, K. Ohkura1, K. Ueda2

1 Department of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Kobe University, Japan

2 Research into Artifacts, Center for Engineering, The University of Tokyo, Japan

15.30-16.00

Coffee

16.00- Closing



back to IWES'04