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3
Regulation and Control
can also be quantified, provided that function and structure are quantifiable. The
dependency of whole-system function on the components of an arbitrarily chosen
piece of the system can then be measured. The less that dependency itself depends on
components outside the chosen piece, the more the function of that piece is localized
(i.e., the more modular it is). If the dependencies are represented as second derivatives
of function with respect to pairs of parameters (the Hessian matrix of fitness), modules
can be identified as those collections of parameters that are concentrated around the
diagonal of the matrix.
Problem. Quantify the regularity, modularity, and hierarchicality for a variety of
artificial and natural systems.
3.8
Autonomy and Heterarchical Architecture
Autonomy or “autonomous unity” has been seen as the essential, characteristic fea-
ture of life (Varela et al. 1974). These authors introduced the idea of the autopoietic
organization, in which a “network of interactions of components” (which, in a single
cell, could be its biochemical reactions) participates recursively in the same network
that produced them. This idea of recursiveness, or self-referentiality, is a fairly obvi-
ous feature of the working of the human brain. After McCulloch and Pitts published
their famous study of the hierarchical logic of information processing (McCulloch
and Pitts 1943), 2 later they came to realize that an adequate description of neural
activities requires a heterarchical structure (McCulloch 1945). Self-reference only
derives from heterarchically structured systems (Kaehr and von Goldammer 1988).
As Fig. 14.1 shows, the relationship between genes and proteins is also self-
referential, the genes being inert and functionless without the proteins that they
encode working to express the genes.
3.9
Biological Information Processing
The living information processor par excellence is of course the brain, but informa-
tion processing by individual cells such as an amoeba has recently been scrutinized
and computational methods extracted from its behaviour. 3 Conversely, biophysico-
chemical information processing means constructing information processors using
biological components such as lipid bilayer membranes and enzymes. 4 Working
integrated information processing systems are typically based on a planar membrane
of thicknessupper LL in which an enzyme is homogeneously immobilized. Their operation
2 Cf. the von Neumann computer model.
3 Nakagaki et al. (2009); see also Umedachi et al. (2010).
4 Valleton (1990).