Andrew Adamatzky

Andrew Adamatzky is a British computer scientist, who is a Director of the Unconventional Computing Laboratory and Professor in Unconventional Computing at the Department of Computer Science and Creative Technology, University of the West of England, Bristol, United Kingdom.

[1] He has used slime moulds to plan potential routes for roadway systems[2][3] and as components of nanorobotic systems,[4][5] and discovered that they seek out valerian tablets, promoted as a herbal sedative, in preference to nutrients.

[6] He has also shown that the billiard balls in billiard-ball computers may be replaced by soldier crabs.

[7][8] Adamatzky is a director of the Unconventional Computing Laboratory,[9] founding Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Cellular Automata (OCP Science, 2005–) and the International Journal of Unconventional Computing (OCP Science, 2005–), and current Editor-in-Chief of Parallel Processing Letters (World Scientific, 2017–).

Adamatzky is the author or co-author of several books: In addition he is the editor or co-editor of many edited volumes.