How vesicles compute with chemical cocktails
April 15, 2011
Andrew Adamatzky at the University of the West of England has developed a concept for “vesicle computing”: a chemical cocktail that can support a rich and complex set of behaviors in a honeycomb of cells, acting like tiny Turing machines.
These would be irregular arrangements of vesicles filled with excitable and precipitating chemical systems.
They would be microfactories, where the results of their computations are chemicals that form into useful objects, a bit like 3D printers, but more like living cells and the molecular machines they contain that make the building blocks of life.
http://goo.gl/1Jb4H
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