COSC 494/594
Unconventional Computation
Fall 2013
Instructor:
Bruce MacLennan, PhD
Phone: 974-0994
Office: Min Kao 550
Office Hours: MW 1:30–2:30, or make an
appointment
Email: maclennan
AT eecs.utk.edu
Classes: 2:30–3:20 MWF, MK 405
Directory of Handouts, Labs, etc.
This page: http://web.eecs.utk.edu/~mclennan/Classes/494-UC
or http://web.eecs.utk.edu/~mclennan/Classes/594-UC
Information
Description
Unconventional computation
(or non-standard computation)
refers to the use of non-traditional technologies and computing
paradigms. As we approach the limits of Moore’s Law, progress in
computation will depend on going beyond binary electronics and on
exploring new paradigms and technologies for information
processing and control. This new course surveys some potential
approaches to post-Moore’s Law computing.
Potential topics include quantum computation and quantum
annealing; optical computing; analog computing; DNA, RNA, peptide,
and general molecular computation; chemical computing;
reaction-diffusion systems; liquid-state machines; amorphous
computing; membrane computing and P systems; single organic
molecule computing; computational mechanics; collision-based
computing; reversible computing; spatial computation; cellular
automata; cellular neural nets; neurocomputers; organic
computation; natural computation; physarum computers; emergent
computation; hypercomputation; non-Turing computation.
Prerequisites
I intend this course to be accessible to all upper-division
undergraduate and graduate students in computer science, computer
engineering, electrical engineering, mathematics, physics, and
similar disciplines. However, students will be expected to be
familiar with linear algebra.
If you have any questions about whether you should take it, please
email me.
Students taking the course for graduate credit (COSC 594) will be
expected to do specified additional work, including an in-class
presentation.
Grading
There will be a mixture of homework, simulation experiments, and
a term paper. Graduate students will be expected to do an in-class
presentation.
Text
None.
Student Learning
Outcomes
Click
here for pdf.
Tentative List of Topics
- Introduction: Lecture Notes I [pdf]
- Post-Moore’s law computing
- Embodied computing
- Super-Turing vs. non-Turing computation
- Physical information
processing
- Energy dissipation: Lecture
Notes II.A
- Thermodynamics of computation: LN II.B
- Reversible computing: LN II.C
- Quantum computation
- Mathematical preliminaries: LN III.A and review of complex numbers,
FFC-ch4.pdf
- Basic concepts from quantum theory
- Postulates of QM: LN
III.B.1
- Wave-particle duality: LN III.B.2–4
- Uncertainty principle (additional information on
uncertainty principle, FFC-ch6.pdf)
- Dynamics
- Superposition: LN
III.B.5–7
- No-cloning theorem
- Entanglement & EPR paradox
- Quantum information
- Qubits & secure key distribution: LN III.C.1
- Quantum gates: LN
III.C.2
- Quantum circuits: LN
III.C.3-5
- Quantum gate arrays
- Quantum parallelism
- Applications: Superdense coding and quantum teleportation:
LN III.C.6
- Universal quantum gates: LN III.C.7
- Quantum algorithms
- Deutsch-Jozsa: LN
III.D.1
- Simon: LN III.D.2
- Shor: LN III.D.3
- Grover & heuristic search: LN III.D.4
- Quantum error correction: LN III.D.5
- Abrams-Lloyd theorem: LN
III.E
- Universal quantum computers: LN III.F
- Feynman
- Benioff
- Deutsch
- Physical realizations: LN
III.G
- Quantum probability in cognition: LN III.H
- Molecular computation
- Basic concepts: LN IV.A
- DNA basics
- DNA manipulation
- Filtering models
- Adleman: LN IV.B.1
- Lipton: LN IV.B.2
- Test tube programming language
- Parallel filtering model
- Formal models
- Sticker systems
- Splicing systems
- Enzymatic computation
- Universal DNA computers
- Chemical reaction systems
- Membrane systems (Paun)
- Summary
- Analog computation
- Computational power
- Computational complexity
- Spatial computation
- Cellular automata
- Cellular neural networks
- Computing with solitons etc.
- Reaction-diffusion computing
- Biocomputing
- Physarum machines
- Unstructured computation
- Liquid-state machines
- Reservoir computing
- Amorphous computing
- Blob computing
- Self-assembling systems
- Other potential topics
- Field computation
- Optical computing
- Carbon nanotubes
- Spintronics
- Relativistic computing
- Abstract geometrical computation
- Arithmetical hierarchy
- Algebraic TM computation
- Infinite-time computation
Assignments
-
Topics for presentations (Nov. 22 – Dec. 2)
and term papers (due Dec. 9)
- Exercises for Ch. II (due
Sep. 13)
- Exercises for Ch. III
(due Nov. 13): 28, 29, 31, 32, 35, 36, 38, 39.
- Quantum Circuit
Project (due Dec. 2).
Simulations
None at this time.
Online Resources
- Unconventional and
Non-standard Computing in general:
- Quantum Computing:
- Miscellaneous
Return to MacLennan’s
home page
Send mail
to Bruce MacLennan / MacLennan@eecs.utk.edu
This page is web.eecs.utk.edu/~mclennan/Classes/494-UC or
web.eecs.utk.edu/~mclennan/Classes/594-UC
Last updated: 2013-11-21.