Technology Review: Intelligence Explained (!) - 0 views
-
"Scientists are now able to switch the focus from particular regions of the brain to the connections between those regions," says Sherif Karama, a psychiatrist and a neuroscientist at McGill University's Montreal Neurological Institute.
-
A quantifiable "general intelligence factor," known as g, can be statistically extracted from scores on a battery of intelligence tests.
-
In 2001, Thompson showed that it is correlated with volume in the frontal cortex, a result consistent with a number of studies that have linked intelligence to overall brain size.
- ...3 more annotations...
Do Bayesian statistics rule the brain? - 0 views
-
Over the past decade, neuroscientists have found that real brains seem to work in this way. In perception and learning experiments, for example, people tend to make estimates - of the location or speed of a moving object, say - in a way that fits with Bayesian probability theory. There's also evidence that the brain makes internal predictions and updates them in a Bayesian manner. When you listen to someone talking, for example, your brain isn't simply receiving information, it also predicts what it expects to hear and constantly revises its predictions based on what information comes next. These predictions strongly influence what you actually hear, allowing you, for instance, to make sense of distorted or partially obscured speech.
-
In fact, making predictions and re-evaluating them seems to be a universal feature of the brain. At all times your brain is weighing its inputs and comparing them with internal predictions in order to make sense of the world.
Karl Friston - 0 views
-
as providing the most promising attempt at a unified theory of brain functions
-
Through a Darwinian process, selecting from the competing models the one best supported by the evidence, a basis for action is chosen.
Artificial Intelligence - 0 views
Equal numbers of neuronal and nonneuronal cells ma... [J Comp Neurol. 2009] - PubMed re... - 0 views
-
"We find that the adult male human brain contains on average 86.1 +/- 8.1 billion NeuN-positive cells ("neurons") and 84.6 +/- 9.8 billion NeuN-negative ("nonneuronal") cells. With only 19% of all neurons located in the cerebral cortex, greater cortical size (representing 82% of total brain mass) in humans compared with other primates does not reflect an increased relative number of cortical neurons. "
-
New data about overall number of neurons in brain
Convolutional Neural Network MNIST Workbench - CodeProject - 3 views
Cortex Mapping - Van Essen Lab - 1 views
« First
‹ Previous
61 - 80
Next ›
Last »
Showing 20▼ items per page