Selected papers of the Second Workshop on Concurrency and compositionality
Gamma and the Chemical Reaction Model: Fifteen Years After
WMP '00 Proceedings of the Workshop on Multiset Processing: Multiset Processing, Mathematical, Computer Science, and Molecular Computing Points of View
Theoretical Computer Science - Algorithms,automata, complexity and games
Fundamenta Informaticae - New Frontiers in Scientific Discovery - Commemorating the Life and Work of Zdzislaw Pawlak
Events and modules in reaction systems
Theoretical Computer Science
Biochemical Reactions as Computations
CiE '07 Proceedings of the 3rd conference on Computability in Europe: Computation and Logic in the Real World
Introducing time in reaction systems
Theoretical Computer Science
On probabilistic and quantum reaction systems
Theoretical Computer Science
Towards bridging two cell-inspired models: P systems and R systems
Theoretical Computer Science
EvoBIO'12 Proceedings of the 10th European conference on Evolutionary Computation, Machine Learning and Data Mining in Bioinformatics
Parameter tuning of evolutionary reactions systems
Proceedings of the 14th annual conference on Genetic and evolutionary computation
Fundamenta Informaticae - New Frontiers in Scientific Discovery - Commemorating the Life and Work of Zdzislaw Pawlak
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Natural Computing is a general term referring to computing taking place in nature and computing inspired by nature. There is a huge surge of research on natural computing, and one of the reasons for it is that two powerful and growing research trends happen at the same time (and actually strengthen and influence each other). These two trends are: (1) trying to understand the functioning of a living cell from the cell-as-a-whole perspective, (2) trying to free the theory of computation from classical paradigms (the ongoing transition to the so called “non-classical computation”) in order to explore a much broader notion of computation. This broader notion should take into account not only the original/classical point of view of “computation as calculation” but should also account for (be inspired by) processes, e.g., life processes, taking place in nature.