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Amira .

MoNETA: A Mind Made from Memristors | IEEE Spectrum - 1 views

  • It will perceive its surroundings, decide which information is useful, integrate that information into the emerging structure of its reality, and in some applications, formulate plans that will ensure its survival. In other words, MoNETA will be motivated by the same drives that motivate cockroaches, cats, and humans.
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    DARPA's new memristor-based approach to AI consists of a chip that mimics how neurons process information
Marlene A. Mania

A Colorquiz.com Review - a Free and Easy Quiz | Webupon - 0 views

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    Do you want to know more about your personality? Pick a few colors, and gain so much insight about yourself… all with the help of a simple little quiz.
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    It's a fun, free, and easy quiz!
Marlene A. Mania

Do you dread your job, or do you love it? - WebAnswers.com - 0 views

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    Are you someone who has a badly suited (and, or) dead-end job, and gain (absolutely) no satisfaction from it - (besides the fact that the grueling situation puts the 'bread and butter on the table'); or, do you delight in what you do...
Amira .

The Psychological Study of Smiling By Eric Jaffe | Association for Psychological Scienc... - 0 views

  • emotional data funnels to the brain, exciting the left anterior temporal region in particular, then smolders to the surface of the face, where two muscles, standing at attention, are roused into action: The zygomatic major, which resides in the cheek, tugs the lips upward, and the orbicularis oculi, which encircles the eye socket, squeezes the outside corners into the shape of a crow’s foot. The entire event is short — typically lasting from two-thirds of a second to four seconds — and those who witness it often respond by mirroring the action, and smiling back.
  • For decades, many psychologists agreed that smiles reflected a vast array of emotions rather than a universal expression of happi­ness. This belief persisted until the 1970s, when Paul Ekman and Wallace Friesen, psychologists at the University of California at San Francisco, captured the precise muscular coordinates behind 3,000 facial expressions in their Facial Action Coding System, known as FACS. Ekman and Friesen used their system to resurrect Duchenne’s distinction, by that time forgotten, between genuine smiles of enjoyment and other types of smiles.
  • Some researchers now believe that genuine smiles are not transient sparks of emotion but rather clear windows into a person’s core disposition.
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  • “People photograph each other with casual ease and remarkable frequency, usually unaware that each snapshot may capture as much about the future as it does the passing emotions of the moment,” Harker and Keltner wrote in a 2001 issue of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. A related study, published in a 2009 issue of Motivation and Emotion, confirmed a correlation between low-intensity smiles in youth and divorce later in life.
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