Marko Cvjetko
@marko_cvjetko
PhD student at @flowersInria, focusing on open-ended evolution in cellular automata
ID: 1784908098978631680
29-04-2024 11:30:41
12 Tweet
12 Followers
143 Following
Announcing SONI: Self-Organising Neural Intelligence(s) 🧠 An #ALife2025 special session to bring together AI & ALIFE Conference 2025 communities to explore how self-organisation can contribute to neural paradigms of intelligence Call for papers sites.google.com/view/soni-alife |Deadline: May 4th
🧠 One of the key limitation of LLMs today is their lack of metacognition: they were (mostly) not trained to know what they know or don't know, what they can or can't do. 🚀At Inria Flowers team, we're proposing an approach to build metacognition into LLMs: MAGELLAN !
i just got an art grant from the council for the arts at MIT! *Tangible Dreams* will let visitors experiment and play with a physical neural network generating images real-time—by twisting knobs and switches, by reconnecting nodes together Arts at MIT
New paper! hartl.bene and Andreas Zöttl nature.com/articles/s4200… "Neuroevolution of decentralized decision- making in N-bead swimmers leads to scalable and robust collective locomotion" "Many microorganisms swim by performing larger non-reciprocal shape deformations that are
A butterfly is born 🦋 This is a new type of CA called "MaCE Lenia", by Vassilis Papadopoulos & E Guichard. arXiv paper: arxiv.org/abs/2507.12306 They'll have a poster & demo at ALIFE Conference 2025, (I will also have a booth nearby). Please come to visit us at Posters + Public Expo (Tue 5-8pm)!
3 papers from Inria Flowers team are presented this week at the ALIFE Conference 2025 , leveraging curiosity-driven AI to explore complex behaviors in #Lenia All first authors are attending the conference if you want to discuss with them Link to interactive websites, papers and code below:
I was so excited when I saw that Neural Cellular Automata had been applied to the ARC Prize - do you remember the famous self-repairing Gecko from Alex Mordvintsev in 2020? I think ALIFE methods are an exciting path forward in AI research! This is Stefano Nichele and Etienne Guichard at