After I came to know Jerne's network theory on the immune system, I became fascinated with the immune system as an information system. The main pro totypes for biological information systems have been the neural systems and the brain. However, the immune system is not only an interesting informa tion system but it may provide a design paradigm for artificial information systems. With such a consideration, I initiated a project titled "autonomous decentralized recognition mechanism of the immune network and its applica tion to distributed information processing" in 1990 under a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on a Priority Area ("Autonomous Distributed Systems") supported by the Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture. During the project, I promoted the idea that the immune system could be a prototype of autonomous distributed systems. After the project, we organized an international workshop on immunity based systems in 1996 in conjunction with the International Conference on Multi-Agent Systems held in Kyoto, Japan. Recently, there have been several international conferences related to topics inspired by the immune system and an increasing number of research papers related to the topic. In writing this book, a decade after the project, I still believe that the immune system can be a prototype, a compact but sophisticated system that nature has shown us for building artificial information systems in this network age of the twenty-first century. Front Matter....Pages I-XII Introduction....Pages 1-5 Toward a Systems Science for Biological Systems....Pages 7-26 The Immune System as an Information System....Pages 27-54 Defining Immunity-Based Systems....Pages 55-76 A Self-Organizing Network Based on the Concept of the Immune Network....Pages 77-94 Sensor Networks Using the Self-Organizing Network....Pages 95-106 A Multiagent Framework Learned from the Immune System....Pages 107-120 An Application of the Immune Algorithm with an Agent Framework....Pages 121-138 Information Flow, Biological Field, and Autonomous Distributed Systems....Pages 139-149 The Immune System as a Self-Defining Process....Pages 151-163 Conclusions....Pages 165-166 Back Matter....Pages 167-177 Introduction Towards a Systems Science for Biological Systems The Immune System as an Information System Defining Immunity-Based Systems A Self-Organizing Network Based on the Concept of the Immune Network Sensor Networks by the Self-Organizing Network A Multiagent Framework Learned from the Immune System An Application of the Immune Algorithm with Agent Architecture Information Flow, Biological Field and Autonomous Decentralized Systems The Immune System as a Self-Defining Process Conclusion. This book presents a framework for communication intensive autonomous agents inspired from the immune system. With the rapid increase of computational power and networking technology similarity between computer and biological systems may now practically work. The framework presented fills the need to guide the implementation of such a "biological" system. It is described in detail focusing on the field of diagnosis and control. Several sample applications and simulations are presented.