Dear Benoît, Dan, Timothy, Ruyhei, Cynthia and Nicolas,

Please remark that the deadline is approaching.

We are still missing the following talks:

    (4) Benoît Piranda: How to manage the movement of robots with VisibleSim to achieve locomotion and self-reconfiguration

And  the following 5 open problems:

        (O3) Dan Halperin: Minimum number of control alterations (squares in polygon, discs in curved workspace)
        (O4) Timothy Gomez: Unique Assembly Verification in Two-Handed Self-Assembly
        (O6) Ryuhei Uehara: 🧩 Complexity of recent popular puzzles? (3D & 2D tight bin packing), Slide-and-pack, Shortest build sequence.
        (O8) Cynthia Sung: When can a structure self-fold? 🧲📃📄
        (O10) Nicolas Schabanel: An open problem presentation on the scaffold routing problem in DNA origami


Please make sure that you upload it as soon as possible.

Once again, the process is **very** **very** light. No latex is needed. Just an abstract and maybe a couple of references. Here are the 4 steps:

1. Connect to the following url:

http://drs.dagstuhl.de/23091
Login/Password: Your DOOR credentials

2. Select "Add abstract" (or click the edit button for an already existing entry).

3. Fill out the form by providing title, authors, abstract, and - if applicable - a bibliographic reference together with its digital location.

4. Select "Save abstract" to save your data.

I would appreciate it if you could complete the above 4 steps as early as possible.

Thank you and best regards,

Ioannis


On Tue, 28 Mar 2023 at 15:39, Ioannis Chatzigiannakis <ichatz@diag.uniroma1.it> wrote:
Dear colleagues,

This is a kind reminder that out of the 9 talks, we are still missing the following:

    (3) Jo Ellis-Monneghan: DNA self-assembly strategies
    (4) Benoît Piranda: How to manage the movement of robots with VisibleSim to achieve locomotion and self-reconfiguration
    (8) Giovanni Viglietta: Programmable Matter: From Fractal Formation to Genetic Programming Solutions

And out of the 11 open problems, we are still missing the following:

        (O1) Amira Abdel-Rahman: Path Planning for the Assembly and Reconfiguration of Structures Using Neural Cellular Automata
        (O3) Dan Halperin: Minimum number of control alterations (squares in polygon, discs in curved workspace)
        (O4) Timothy Gomez: Unique Assembly Verification in Two-Handed Self-Assembly
        (O5) Maria Kokkou: Leader election in grids with faults
        (O6) Ryuhei Uehara: 🧩 Complexity of recent popular puzzles? (3D & 2D tight bin packing), Slide-and-pack, Shortest build sequence.
        (O8) Cynthia Sung: When can a structure self-fold? 🧲📃📄
        (O10) Nicolas Schabanel: An open problem presentation on the scaffold routing problem in DNA origami
        (O11) Yuval Emek: A self-stabilizing chemical reaction network implementation of a modular clock


Please make sure that you upload it as soon as possible.

Once again, the process is **very** **very** light. No latex is needed. Just an abstract and maybe a couple of references.

I would appreciate it if you could complete the above 4 steps by the end of this week.

In case I made a mistake in the above lists, please let me know.

Thank you and best regards,

Ioannis

On Mon, 20 Mar 2023 at 16:27, Ioannis Chatzigiannakis <ichatz@diag.uniroma1.it> wrote:
Dear colleagues,

This is a kind reminder that out of the 9 talks, we are still missing the following:

    (2) Danny Halperin: From snapping fixtures to multi-robot coordination: Geometry at the service of robotics
    (3) Jo Ellis-Monneghan: DNA self-assembly strategies
    (4) Benoît Piranda: How to manage the movement of robots with VisibleSim to achieve locomotion and self-reconfiguration
    (8) Giovanni Viglietta: Programmable Matter: From Fractal Formation to Genetic Programming Solutions

Please make sure that you upload it as soon as possible.

At this point I would also like to mention that the plan is to include an abstract for all the presentations of open problems. Here is the list:

        (O1) Amira Abdel-Rahman: Path Planning for the Assembly and Reconfiguration of Structures Using Neural Cellular Automata
        (O2) Tanja Kaiser: Open-ended evolution by minimizing surprise
        (O3) Dan Halperin: Minimum number of control alterations (squares in polygon, discs in curved workspace)
        (O4) Timothy Gomez: Unique Assembly Verification in Two-Handed Self-Assembly
        (O5) Maria Kokkou: Leader election in grids with faults
        (O6) Ryuhei Uehara: 🧩 Complexity of recent popular puzzles? (3D & 2D tight bin packing), Slide-and-pack, Shortest build sequence.
        (O7) Irene Parada: Reconfiguration without scaling of fast parallel reconfiguration.
        (O8) Cynthia Sung: When can a structure self-fold? 🧲📃📄
        (O9) Christian Scheideler: Amoebot fast reconfiguration based on circuit extension 🦠
        (O10) Nicolas Schabanel: An open problem presentation on the scaffold routing problem in DNA origami
        (O11) Yuval Emek: A self-stabilizing chemical reaction network implementation of a modular clock


Once again, the process is **very** **very** light. No latex is needed. Just an abstract and maybe a couple of references.

I would appreciate it if you could complete the above 4 steps by the end of this week.

In case I made a mistake in the above lists, please let me know.

Thank you and best regards,

Ioannis


On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 at 11:07, Ioannis Chatzigiannakis <ichatz@diag.uniroma1.it> wrote:
Dear colleagues,

After consulting the schedule thread on coworker, I have identified the following 9 talks:

    (1) Christian Scheideler: Reconfigurable circuit extension of the Amoebot model - introduction, recent results and future directions
    (2) Danny Halperin: From snapping fixtures to multi-robot coordination: Geometry at the service of robotics
    (3) Jo Ellis-Monneghan: DNA self-assembly strategies
    (4) Benoît Piranda: How to manage the movement of robots with VisibleSim to achieve locomotion and self-reconfiguration
    (5) Kay Römer: Scalable Real-Time Localization for Robotic Ensembles
    (6) Amira Abdel-Rahmen: Meta-materials, modular robots, and reconfigurable robot swarms
    (7) Tom Peters: Fast communication in amoebot systems
    (8) Giovanni Viglietta: Programmable Matter: From Fractal Formation to Genetic Programming Solutions
    (9) Damien Woods: DNA self-assembly and robotics
   
In case I have missed something, please let me know.

So far I see that only Kay and Damien have submitted their abstract on the dagstuhl server.

Remark that the process is **very** light:

1. Connect to the following url:

http://drs.dagstuhl.de/23091
Login/Password: Your DOOR credentials

2. Select "Add abstract" (or click the edit button for an already existing entry).

3. Fill out the form by providing title, authors, abstract, and - if applicable - a bibliographic reference together with its digital location.

4. Select "Save abstract" to save your data.

I would appreciate it if you could complete the above 4 steps by the end of this week.

Thank you and best regards,

Ioannis



On Mon, 6 Mar 2023 at 20:32, Sándor Fekete <s.fekete@tu-braunschweig.de> wrote:
Dear participants,

In the meantime, I hope you have all made it home well
- especially those of you who were dealing with illness!

Thank you so much for a wonderful week in Dagstuhl!
As discussed near the end of the seminar, here are
a few more things:

(1) If you have not done so, fill in the questionnaire
      sent by Dagstuhl.
(2) Please find below the announcement for the
     report, as discussed on Thursday. Some notes:
* The date is the final one for the Dagstuhl server;
           please send it to us (via coauthor, see (3) below)
           earlier if you can.
* Ioannis has been awarded the whip to ensure
  it all gets delivered. :)
(3) For all our convenience and exchange of information,
     please use the coauthor repository as well. If you go to
     and 0.1 Schedule, you will find that the contributions
     have been numbered. When you go to "1.2 Talk Titles
     and Slides“, you can simply add that number to the 
     title, so everyone can find it at a glance.
(4) As discussed in the wrap-up session on Friday, please
     also review your presence in coauthor; in particular,
     make sure your name is visible in those topics that
     interest you, so that you are part of the ongoing discussions.
     (This is particularly important for those of you who
      had to leave before the Friday session.)
(5) We will get back to you about an open followup zoom 
     session in a few weeks.
(6) Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions
     or suggestions!

Cheers,
Sándor 




Anfang der weitergeleiteten Nachricht:

Von: Jutka Gasiorowski <reports@dagstuhl.de>
Betreff: Dagstuhl Reports/23091 - Documentation of your seminar
Datum: 2. März 2023 um 09:22:59 MEZ
An: Aaron Becker <atbecker@uh.edu>, Fekete, Sándor <s.fekete@tu-braunschweig.de>, Irina Kostitsyna <i.kostitsyna@tue.nl>, "Matthew J. Patitz" <patitz@uark.edu>, Damien Woods <Damien.Woods@mu.ie>
Umgeleitet von: <s.fekete@tu-braunschweig.de>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Call for Abstracts as used by the collector
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: Documentation of Dagstuhl Seminar 23091 "Algorithmic Foundations of Programmable Matter"
To: seminar-23091@rhea.dagstuhl.de

Dear Participants of Dagstuhl Seminar 23091 "Algorithmic Foundations of Programmable Matter",

We hope that you enjoyed a fruitful seminar. As a point of reference for all
participants, outside researchers, as well as Dagstuhl's funding agencies we would
like to keep records of our seminar 23091. We would like to ask you to prepare a
summary for any presentation that you have given at the seminar. Additionally,
results from working groups should also be documented. For a talk, the
documentation mainly consists of a brief abstract along with a list of co-authors
and a bibliographic reference (if available).

Please note that an abstract submitted prior to the seminar on the seminar's
material page *will not* be automatically used as documentation entry, but you may
copy&paste that entry. This way, we'd like to clarify that your documentation
entry is part of an official publication.

Your documentation entry will be published as part of the seminar's issue of the
periodical series "Dagstuhl Reports", see http://www.dagstuhl.de/dagrep

*   Deadline: The deadline for submitting your documentation entry is:

April 28, 2023. 
*   Upload: To submit your documentation entry, please visit

    http://drs.dagstuhl.de/23091
    Login/Password: Your DOOR credentials

The submission works as follows:

1.  Select "Add abstract" (or click the edit button for an already existing entry).
2.  Fill out the form by providing title, authors, abstract, and - if applicable -
    a bibliographic reference together with its digital location.
3.  IMPORTANT: To approve your entry for publication, please select "Complete"
    abstract" in the "Completed" section of the abstract editor. No more
    changes can be made after saving a completed entry. You may modify or amend
    your entry as long as it is not marked as completed.
4.  Select "Save abstract" to save your data (or select "Cancel" if you wish to
    abort the submission).
5.  Select either "save all" or "cancel" brings you back to the list of your
    documentation entries.

As the designated collector of the seminar, I'm in charge of coordinating the
preparation of the seminar documentation.

Thank you very much in advance for your support, both on behalf of the seminar
organizers as well as Schloss Dagstuhl. You will receive an email when the report
for this seminar is published.

Please let me know in case of further questions.


Kind regards,
<name of collector>

on behalf of the seminar organizers of
"Algorithmic Foundations of Programmable Matter":

Aaron Becker <atbecker@uh.edu>
Sándor Fekete <s.fekete@tu-bs.de>
Irina Kostitsyna <i.kostitsyna@tue.nl>
Matthew J. Patitz <patitz@uark.edu>
Damien Woods <Damien.Woods@mu.ie>


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