Artificial Life (journal)
Artificial Life is a peer-reviewed scientific journal that covers the study of man-made systems that exhibit the behavioral characteristics of natural living systems. Its articles cover system synthesis in software, hardware, and wetware. Artificial Life was established in 1993 and is the official journal of the International Society of Artificial Life. It is published online and in hard copy by the MIT Press.
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Discipline | Artificial life |
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Language | English |
Edited by | Mark A. Bedau |
Publication details | |
History | 1993–present |
Publisher | MIT Press (United States) |
Frequency | Quarterly |
1.960 (2009) | |
Standard abbreviations | |
ISO 4 | Artif. Life |
Indexing | |
CODEN | ARLIEY |
ISSN | 1064-5462 (print) 1530-9185 (web) |
JSTOR | 10645462 |
OCLC no. | 41177834 |
Links | |
Abstracting and indexing
Artificial Life is abstracted and indexed in Academic Search, Biological Abstracts, BIOSIS Previews, CSA Mechanical & Transportation Engineering Abstracts, Compendex, Current Contents, EMBASE, Excerpta Medica, Inspec, MEDLINE, METADEX, PubMed, Referativny Zhurnal, Science Citation Index Expanded, Scopus, and The Zoological Record.[1]
gollark: Macron *is* a purely functional, statically typed, highly concurrent, expressive language.
gollark: Well, yes, Macron always had this, inspired by Haskell.
gollark: Alternatively, it's *not* power and their amazing optimization™ triggered some kind of exotic microcode bug.
gollark: Or AMD bugginess, I suppose.
gollark: So perhaps some combination of ridiculously "good" code and Intel bugginess resulting in it not power-managing properly could cause some sort of brownout-type thing.
References
- "MIT Press Journals". MIT Press Journals. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
External links
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