To: Jeffrey [email protected]] From: Charles L. Harper Jr. Sent: Fri 11/12/2010 1:57:43 AM Subject: Very interesting research area on the evolution of deception Dear Jeffrey, Quick note: I have done a bit more research on one area you mentioned to me last week. Darwin himself wrote a book on deception in orchids: "On the various contrivances by which orchids are fertilized by insects." (1885) I have discovered that there is a rich and broad-ranging contemporary research literature in this topical area. (I've found hundreds of papers as well as overview books, gene databases, etc.) Apparently, the rate of speciation-evolution in orchids having to do with food and sexual deception, and with plant-pollinator pairing and co-evolution is very rapid. It seems to be a rapidly expanding research field that is seriously connected into evolutionary theory and plant genetics. The topic is not (yet) connected in any way to issues in cryptography. However, I note extensive work on gene complexes called "MADS-box" genes in orchids. This kind of work relates to one of the significant research frontiers I mentioned: systems biology and evolution towards understanding the dynamics of variation: how does a plant specoes "learn" to re-create insect sex phermones as well as insect shapes? (Probably you will know Marc Kirschner at Harvard, who is a key pioneer in systems biology and research on the "evolution of evolution" dynamics of variation). I have identified some serious plant geneticists working in this arena. I think there may be potential to connect with innovation agendas in cryptography pursuing "nature inspired" approaches. For example, the work of the cryptologist John A. Clark (See: http://www- users.cs.york.ac.uk/-jac/CV.pdf) Paper: "Nature-Inspired Cryptography: Past, Present and Future." (2003) and Paper: "Fusing Natural Computational Paradigms for Cryptography: Or, How to Create Quantum Solvable Cryptographic Problems with Heuristic Search." (2006) This note relays a quick pass only into the literature to report that there seems to be a lot there that looks seriously interesting. Allbest, Charles Harper EFTA_R1_01479231 EFTA02415652


