Books

Short works

Books : reviews

Erick Cantu-Paz, James A. Foster, Kalyanmoy Deb, Lawrence Davis, Rajkumar Roy, Una-May O'Reilly, Hans-Georg Beyer, Russell K. Standish, Graham Kendall, Stewart W. Wilson, Mark Harman, Joachim Wegener, Dipankar Dasgupta, Mitch A. Potter, Alan C. Schultz, Kathryn A. Dowsland, Natasha Jonoska, Julian F. Miller, eds.
GECCO 2003 volume 1: Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference, Chicago, USA, July 2003.
Springer. 2003

(read but not reviewed)

Contents

Matthew Russell, John A. Clark, Susan Stepney. Using Ants to attack a classical cipher. 2003
full paper

Erick Cantu-Paz, James A. Foster, Kalyanmoy Deb, Lawrence Davis, Rajkumar Roy, Una-May O'Reilly, Hans-Georg Beyer, Russell K. Standish, Graham Kendall, Stewart W. Wilson, Mark Harman, Joachim Wegener, Dipankar Dasgupta, Mitch A. Potter, Alan C. Schultz, Kathryn A. Dowsland, Natasha Jonoska, Julian F. Miller, eds.
GECCO 2003 volume 2: Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference, Chicago, USA, July 2003.
Springer. 2003

(read but not reviewed)

Contents

John A. Clark, Jeremy L. Jacob, Susan Stepney. Secret Agents Leave Big Footprints: how to plant a crytographic trapdoor, and why you might not get away with it. 2003
full paper

Jérôme Durand-Lose, Natasha Jonoska.
Unconventional Computation and Natural Computation, UCNC 2012: Orleans, France.
Springer. 2012

(read but not reviewed)

Natasha Jonoska, Erik Winfree.
Visions of DNA Nanotechnology at 40 for the Next 40: a tribute to Nadrian C. Seeman.
Springer. 2023

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This open access book provides a unique and state-of-the-art view on DNA nanotechnology with an eye toward future developments. Intended as a tribute to Nadrian C. Seeman, who founded the field of DNA nanotechnology, the content is an exciting mixture of technical and non-technical material, reviews, tutorials, perspectives, new findings, and open questions. The book aims to inspire current researchers to sit back and think about the big picture, while also enticing new researchers to enter the field. Most of all, the book captures voices from a unique moment in time: 40 years after the publication of the first paper that envisioned DNA nanotechnology.

From this vantage point, what are the untold stories, the unspoken concerns, the underlying fundamental issues, the overlooked opportunities, and the unifying grand challenges? What will help us see more clearly, see more creatively, or see farther? What is transpiring right now that could pave the way for the future? To address these questions, leading researchers have contributed 22 chapters, grouped into five sections: perspectives, chemistry and physics, structures, biochemical circuits, and spatial systems.

This book will be an important reference point in the field of DNA nanotechnology, both for established researchers looking to take stock of the field and its future, and for newcomers such as graduate students and researchers in other fields who are beginning to appreciate the power and applicability of its methods.