Evolutionary Electronics
At Sussex
The University of Sussex

Artificial evolution, such as a Genetic Algorithm, has many promising applications in electronics. These range from using it as an optimisation technique as part of a fairly conventional VLSI synthesis pathway, through to using it to design automatically circuits that could be of a very different nature to the way electronics is normally envisaged. We also apply our philosophy of artificial evolution to other domains of design: we seek to find ways of allowing evolution to explore areas of the "design space" not normally accessible.

Lead Researcher:

  • Adrian Thompson
  • Working closely with Phil Husbands  and Inman Harvey
  • Collaborators and alumni:
  • Miguel Garvie Evolution of self-checking digital circuits using distributed processing across the internet; evolution for self-repair of RAM-based FPGA systems on long-term space missions. Includes Java software for the distributed genetic algorithm.
  • Paul Layzell Now at HP, but click here for information on his past and ongoing hardware evolution work in concert with the Sussex group. This includes full details of the `evolvable motherboard'.
  • Ricardo Salem Zebulum
  • Some other completed Projects:
  • Sverre Vigander's dissertation: `Evolutionary fault repair of electronics in space applications'
  • EPSRC 3-year project `Artificial Evolution of Parallel Distributed Electronic Circuits Directly Exploiting Reconfigurable Hardware'. Summary.
  • Sam Woolf's MSc Thesis on an interactive artwork utilising reconfigurable hardware.
  • Ian Ozsvald's MSc Thesis on evolution for the Zetex TRAC device.
  • LINKS PAGE: Click here for links to other researchers in the field.

    We gratefully acknowledge the support of the following organisations, who's support of our research is a huge help: EPSRC, British Telecom, CAPES (Brazil), Xilinx, Hewlett Packard, Motorola Programmable Technology Centre, Zetex.

    For the sake of search-engines, we should mention that this field is variously known as: Hardware Evolution, Evolvable Hardware (EHW, E-Hard), Evolutionary Electronics, EvolWare, bio-inspired electronics.

    We co-organised the International Conference on Evolvable Systems 2000. It was good.
    Read it in this book.


    Maintained by Adrian Thompson
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