Michio Kaku(加来 道雄,Kaku Michio?, born January 24, 1947) is an American theoretical physicist, the Henry Semat Professor of Theoretical Physics in the City College of New York of City University of New York, a co-founder of string field theory, a futurist, and a "communicator" and "popularizer" of science. He has written several books about physics and related topics; he has made frequent appearances on radio, television, and film; and he writes extensive online blogs and articles. He has written two New York Times best sellers, Physics of the Impossible (2008) and Physics of the Future (2011). He has hosted several TV specials for BBC-TV, the Discovery Channel, and the Science Channel.
Megan deBettencourt started participating in faculty research projects at Columbia since her second year at SEAS. Her senior year, she worked on neuroscience...
10:05
Human brain and growing intelligence
Human brain and growing intelligence
Human brain and growing intelligence
An overview of the human brain and how intelligence can be strengthened though stimulation of the brain. Your brain actually grows when you struggle and make...
13:45
Discovering One's Hidden Psychopathy
Discovering One's Hidden Psychopathy
Discovering One's Hidden Psychopathy
Neuroscientist James Fallon discusses how he came to discover, and how he's learned to live with, the fact that he's a borderline psychopath. Fallon is the a...
5:06
Vietnam Veterans Help Neuroscientists Map Emotional Intelligence in the Brain
Vietnam Veterans Help Neuroscientists Map Emotional Intelligence in the Brain
Vietnam Veterans Help Neuroscientists Map Emotional Intelligence in the Brain
Cognitive neuroscientist Aron Barbey explores the link between general and emotional intelligence by studying Vietnam veterans with focal brain injuries. Usi...
4:00
Neuroscience of Intelligence
Neuroscience of Intelligence
Neuroscience of Intelligence
Intelligence is a significantly broad topic, and can thus be approached from different angles. On the one hand, Lefebvre (2011) maintains that innovation con...
70:26
RI Seminar: Stefan Schaal : From Movement Primitives to Associative Skill Memories
RI Seminar: Stefan Schaal : From Movement Primitives to Associative Skill Memories
RI Seminar: Stefan Schaal : From Movement Primitives to Associative Skill Memories
Stefan Schaal Professor of Computer Science, Neuroscience, and Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern California March 28, 2014 Abstract Controlling ...
3:00
Inside the Mind of a Sociopath
Inside the Mind of a Sociopath
Inside the Mind of a Sociopath
Sociopaths aren't just movie characters and mass murders. Turns out 1 in 25 people suffer from this disorder! Laci looks at what exactly it means to be a soc...
2:28
Investigating Intelligence - A conversation with John Duncan (Preview)
Investigating Intelligence - A conversation with John Duncan (Preview)
Investigating Intelligence - A conversation with John Duncan (Preview)
You can watch the full conversation on our website (www.ideasroadshow.com) or iPad app on Apple Newsstand] What is intelligence? Surely it's not just one th...
59:29
Intelligence and the Brain: Recent Advances in Understanding How the Brain Works with Jeff Hawkins
Intelligence and the Brain: Recent Advances in Understanding How the Brain Works with Jeff Hawkins
Intelligence and the Brain: Recent Advances in Understanding How the Brain Works with Jeff Hawkins
Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) How the brain creates intelligence is viewed by many as the greatest scientific quest of all time. We are living at the time whe...
16:32
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence [Part 1]
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence [Part 1]
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence [Part 1]
This video is part 1 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 2 -http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZGnxi9jOFk How does an animal/machine beco...
22:36
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part [2]
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part [2]
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part [2]
This video is part 2 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 1 - http://youtu.be/vTrMs8dtWAY How does an animal/machine become intelligent...
9:51
Estimating Markets through Behavioral Biomimicry: Alex Terrazas at TEDxSacramento
Estimating Markets through Behavioral Biomimicry: Alex Terrazas at TEDxSacramento
Estimating Markets through Behavioral Biomimicry: Alex Terrazas at TEDxSacramento
Estimating Markets in the Developing World through Satellite Intelligence and Behavioral Biomimicry Can we estimate economic activity from the sky? Can we sa...
51:52
Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?
Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?
Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?
http://facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Meeting Einstein Lecture: "Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?" - Roger D. Traub, State University ...
4:25
Would You Vote for a Psychopath?
Would You Vote for a Psychopath?
Would You Vote for a Psychopath?
Neuroscientist and self-described psychopath James Fallon discusses the psychopathic tendencies of leaders and madmen. Fallon is the author of The Psychopath...
Megan deBettencourt started participating in faculty research projects at Columbia since her second year at SEAS. Her senior year, she worked on neuroscience...
10:05
Human brain and growing intelligence
Human brain and growing intelligence
Human brain and growing intelligence
An overview of the human brain and how intelligence can be strengthened though stimulation of the brain. Your brain actually grows when you struggle and make...
13:45
Discovering One's Hidden Psychopathy
Discovering One's Hidden Psychopathy
Discovering One's Hidden Psychopathy
Neuroscientist James Fallon discusses how he came to discover, and how he's learned to live with, the fact that he's a borderline psychopath. Fallon is the a...
5:06
Vietnam Veterans Help Neuroscientists Map Emotional Intelligence in the Brain
Vietnam Veterans Help Neuroscientists Map Emotional Intelligence in the Brain
Vietnam Veterans Help Neuroscientists Map Emotional Intelligence in the Brain
Cognitive neuroscientist Aron Barbey explores the link between general and emotional intelligence by studying Vietnam veterans with focal brain injuries. Usi...
4:00
Neuroscience of Intelligence
Neuroscience of Intelligence
Neuroscience of Intelligence
Intelligence is a significantly broad topic, and can thus be approached from different angles. On the one hand, Lefebvre (2011) maintains that innovation con...
70:26
RI Seminar: Stefan Schaal : From Movement Primitives to Associative Skill Memories
RI Seminar: Stefan Schaal : From Movement Primitives to Associative Skill Memories
RI Seminar: Stefan Schaal : From Movement Primitives to Associative Skill Memories
Stefan Schaal Professor of Computer Science, Neuroscience, and Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern California March 28, 2014 Abstract Controlling ...
3:00
Inside the Mind of a Sociopath
Inside the Mind of a Sociopath
Inside the Mind of a Sociopath
Sociopaths aren't just movie characters and mass murders. Turns out 1 in 25 people suffer from this disorder! Laci looks at what exactly it means to be a soc...
2:28
Investigating Intelligence - A conversation with John Duncan (Preview)
Investigating Intelligence - A conversation with John Duncan (Preview)
Investigating Intelligence - A conversation with John Duncan (Preview)
You can watch the full conversation on our website (www.ideasroadshow.com) or iPad app on Apple Newsstand] What is intelligence? Surely it's not just one th...
59:29
Intelligence and the Brain: Recent Advances in Understanding How the Brain Works with Jeff Hawkins
Intelligence and the Brain: Recent Advances in Understanding How the Brain Works with Jeff Hawkins
Intelligence and the Brain: Recent Advances in Understanding How the Brain Works with Jeff Hawkins
Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) How the brain creates intelligence is viewed by many as the greatest scientific quest of all time. We are living at the time whe...
16:32
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence [Part 1]
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence [Part 1]
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence [Part 1]
This video is part 1 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 2 -http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZGnxi9jOFk How does an animal/machine beco...
22:36
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part [2]
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part [2]
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part [2]
This video is part 2 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 1 - http://youtu.be/vTrMs8dtWAY How does an animal/machine become intelligent...
9:51
Estimating Markets through Behavioral Biomimicry: Alex Terrazas at TEDxSacramento
Estimating Markets through Behavioral Biomimicry: Alex Terrazas at TEDxSacramento
Estimating Markets through Behavioral Biomimicry: Alex Terrazas at TEDxSacramento
Estimating Markets in the Developing World through Satellite Intelligence and Behavioral Biomimicry Can we estimate economic activity from the sky? Can we sa...
51:52
Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?
Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?
Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?
http://facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Meeting Einstein Lecture: "Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?" - Roger D. Traub, State University ...
4:25
Would You Vote for a Psychopath?
Would You Vote for a Psychopath?
Would You Vote for a Psychopath?
Neuroscientist and self-described psychopath James Fallon discusses the psychopathic tendencies of leaders and madmen. Fallon is the author of The Psychopath...
66:41
Michio Kaku (2014) "What Is The Future Of The Mind?"
Michio Kaku (2014) "What Is The Future Of The Mind?"
Michio Kaku (2014) "What Is The Future Of The Mind?"
Subscribe For Michio Kaku's Speeches, Interviews, and Debates! For the first time in history, the secrets of the living brain are being revealed by a battery...
1:14
Brain Function Not Completely Dependent on Size
Brain Function Not Completely Dependent on Size
Brain Function Not Completely Dependent on Size
In order to determine the intelligence of a species, scientists often use the brain mass relative to the body size of an animal. But it turns out that althou...
0:09
Hippocampal Neuron in 3D rotation
Hippocampal Neuron in 3D rotation
Hippocampal Neuron in 3D rotation
A movie of a cultured rat hippocampal neuron reconstructed in 3D using pseudoconfocal microscopy (deconvolution by Slidebook [Intelligent Imaging Innovations...
13:25
TEDxHendrixCollege - Andy James - The Cognitive Connectome
TEDxHendrixCollege - Andy James - The Cognitive Connectome
TEDxHendrixCollege - Andy James - The Cognitive Connectome
Dr. Andy James is exploring individual differences in cognition using fMRI. By developing a cognitive connectome, or a map of connections in the brain that a...
73:01
Jeff Hawkins: Advances in Modeling Neocortex and its Impact on Machine Intelligence
Jeff Hawkins: Advances in Modeling Neocortex and its Impact on Machine Intelligence
Jeff Hawkins: Advances in Modeling Neocortex and its Impact on Machine Intelligence
Smith Group Lecture by Jeff Hawkins presented at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ...
3:51
Michael Gelb: Neuroscience Excerpt 1
Michael Gelb: Neuroscience Excerpt 1
Michael Gelb: Neuroscience Excerpt 1
This is an excerpt from the 4th session of Why Neuroscience Matters: Concrete Strategies for Your Practice, a continuing education webcast for counselors, th...
63:09
Human and Machine Intelligence
Human and Machine Intelligence
Human and Machine Intelligence
Chair: Barbara Grosz Panel: Edward A. Feigenbaum, Marvin Minsky, Judea Pearl, Raj Reddy Abstract In his 1950 Mind paper, Alan Turing reframed the question of...
74:00
Intelligence and Learning in Brains and Machines
Intelligence and Learning in Brains and Machines
Intelligence and Learning in Brains and Machines
Speaker begins at 3:26 The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Heller Lectures Series in Computational Neuroscience The Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Comput...
38:53
"What is neuro-nonsense?" a talk by Anthony Jack about over-hyped neuroscience research.
"What is neuro-nonsense?" a talk by Anthony Jack about over-hyped neuroscience research.
"What is neuro-nonsense?" a talk by Anthony Jack about over-hyped neuroscience research.
Talk given to the department of Organization Behavior at CWRU about how brain imaging can be used and misused to inform our understanding of cognition, parti...
Megan deBettencourt started participating in faculty research projects at Columbia since her second year at SEAS. Her senior year, she worked on neuroscience...
Megan deBettencourt started participating in faculty research projects at Columbia since her second year at SEAS. Her senior year, she worked on neuroscience...
An overview of the human brain and how intelligence can be strengthened though stimulation of the brain. Your brain actually grows when you struggle and make...
An overview of the human brain and how intelligence can be strengthened though stimulation of the brain. Your brain actually grows when you struggle and make...
Neuroscientist James Fallon discusses how he came to discover, and how he's learned to live with, the fact that he's a borderline psychopath. Fallon is the a...
Neuroscientist James Fallon discusses how he came to discover, and how he's learned to live with, the fact that he's a borderline psychopath. Fallon is the a...
Cognitive neuroscientist Aron Barbey explores the link between general and emotional intelligence by studying Vietnam veterans with focal brain injuries. Usi...
Cognitive neuroscientist Aron Barbey explores the link between general and emotional intelligence by studying Vietnam veterans with focal brain injuries. Usi...
Intelligence is a significantly broad topic, and can thus be approached from different angles. On the one hand, Lefebvre (2011) maintains that innovation con...
Intelligence is a significantly broad topic, and can thus be approached from different angles. On the one hand, Lefebvre (2011) maintains that innovation con...
Stefan Schaal Professor of Computer Science, Neuroscience, and Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern California March 28, 2014 Abstract Controlling ...
Stefan Schaal Professor of Computer Science, Neuroscience, and Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern California March 28, 2014 Abstract Controlling ...
Sociopaths aren't just movie characters and mass murders. Turns out 1 in 25 people suffer from this disorder! Laci looks at what exactly it means to be a soc...
Sociopaths aren't just movie characters and mass murders. Turns out 1 in 25 people suffer from this disorder! Laci looks at what exactly it means to be a soc...
You can watch the full conversation on our website (www.ideasroadshow.com) or iPad app on Apple Newsstand] What is intelligence? Surely it's not just one th...
You can watch the full conversation on our website (www.ideasroadshow.com) or iPad app on Apple Newsstand] What is intelligence? Surely it's not just one th...
Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) How the brain creates intelligence is viewed by many as the greatest scientific quest of all time. We are living at the time whe...
Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) How the brain creates intelligence is viewed by many as the greatest scientific quest of all time. We are living at the time whe...
This video is part 1 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 2 -http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZGnxi9jOFk How does an animal/machine beco...
This video is part 1 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 2 -http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZGnxi9jOFk How does an animal/machine beco...
This video is part 2 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 1 - http://youtu.be/vTrMs8dtWAY How does an animal/machine become intelligent...
This video is part 2 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 1 - http://youtu.be/vTrMs8dtWAY How does an animal/machine become intelligent...
Estimating Markets in the Developing World through Satellite Intelligence and Behavioral Biomimicry Can we estimate economic activity from the sky? Can we sa...
Estimating Markets in the Developing World through Satellite Intelligence and Behavioral Biomimicry Can we estimate economic activity from the sky? Can we sa...
http://facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Meeting Einstein Lecture: "Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?" - Roger D. Traub, State University ...
http://facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Meeting Einstein Lecture: "Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?" - Roger D. Traub, State University ...
Neuroscientist and self-described psychopath James Fallon discusses the psychopathic tendencies of leaders and madmen. Fallon is the author of The Psychopath...
Neuroscientist and self-described psychopath James Fallon discusses the psychopathic tendencies of leaders and madmen. Fallon is the author of The Psychopath...
Subscribe For Michio Kaku's Speeches, Interviews, and Debates! For the first time in history, the secrets of the living brain are being revealed by a battery...
Subscribe For Michio Kaku's Speeches, Interviews, and Debates! For the first time in history, the secrets of the living brain are being revealed by a battery...
In order to determine the intelligence of a species, scientists often use the brain mass relative to the body size of an animal. But it turns out that althou...
In order to determine the intelligence of a species, scientists often use the brain mass relative to the body size of an animal. But it turns out that althou...
A movie of a cultured rat hippocampal neuron reconstructed in 3D using pseudoconfocal microscopy (deconvolution by Slidebook [Intelligent Imaging Innovations...
A movie of a cultured rat hippocampal neuron reconstructed in 3D using pseudoconfocal microscopy (deconvolution by Slidebook [Intelligent Imaging Innovations...
Dr. Andy James is exploring individual differences in cognition using fMRI. By developing a cognitive connectome, or a map of connections in the brain that a...
Dr. Andy James is exploring individual differences in cognition using fMRI. By developing a cognitive connectome, or a map of connections in the brain that a...
Smith Group Lecture by Jeff Hawkins presented at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ...
Smith Group Lecture by Jeff Hawkins presented at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ...
This is an excerpt from the 4th session of Why Neuroscience Matters: Concrete Strategies for Your Practice, a continuing education webcast for counselors, th...
This is an excerpt from the 4th session of Why Neuroscience Matters: Concrete Strategies for Your Practice, a continuing education webcast for counselors, th...
Chair: Barbara Grosz Panel: Edward A. Feigenbaum, Marvin Minsky, Judea Pearl, Raj Reddy Abstract In his 1950 Mind paper, Alan Turing reframed the question of...
Chair: Barbara Grosz Panel: Edward A. Feigenbaum, Marvin Minsky, Judea Pearl, Raj Reddy Abstract In his 1950 Mind paper, Alan Turing reframed the question of...
Speaker begins at 3:26 The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Heller Lectures Series in Computational Neuroscience The Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Comput...
Speaker begins at 3:26 The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Heller Lectures Series in Computational Neuroscience The Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Comput...
Talk given to the department of Organization Behavior at CWRU about how brain imaging can be used and misused to inform our understanding of cognition, parti...
Talk given to the department of Organization Behavior at CWRU about how brain imaging can be used and misused to inform our understanding of cognition, parti...
Modern neuroscience is generating data at a staggering and rapidly increasing pace. With so much data suddenly available, the opportunity to make new discove...
56:19
Miniaturization of Medicine and its Impact on Cardiology
Miniaturization of Medicine and its Impact on Cardiology
Miniaturization of Medicine and its Impact on Cardiology
Expanding on this month's issue of JACC:Cardiovascular Imaging which includes an article "Intelligent Platforms for Disease Assessment: Novel Approaches in F...
65:46
Amit Ashok 2013
Amit Ashok 2013
Amit Ashok 2013
September 30 2013 COSI Seminar by Amit Ashok Assistant Professor, College of Optical Sciences, ECE Department, University of Arizona. "A Task Specific Approa...
76:59
Qu'est-ce qu'un cerveau ?
Qu'est-ce qu'un cerveau ?
Qu'est-ce qu'un cerveau ?
À l'occasion de Cervorama, exposition interactive organisée par Cap Sciences à Bordeaux jusqu'au 5 janvier 2014, Daniel Choquet, directeur de recherche au CN...
39:03
Processors for Intelligent Machines
Processors for Intelligent Machines
Processors for Intelligent Machines
64:17
Design at Large - David Kirsh, Thinking with your Body and Other Things
Design at Large - David Kirsh, Thinking with your Body and Other Things
Design at Large - David Kirsh, Thinking with your Body and Other Things
Thinking with your Body and Other Things
David Kirsh, Department of Cognitive Science, UCSD
ABSTRACT: Where does thought, creativity and understanding come from? For the past five years I have been studying the creative practice of a super expert choreographer. I have also been studying problem solving, design thinking and new approaches to situated cognition. A common element running through these studies is that in natural contexts people use resources of all sorts to think with. They use their bodies, their gestures, instruments, tools, representations and everyday objects. The simple thesis I advance is that people often think their ide
53:17
Metamemory: How Does the Brain Predict Itself?
Metamemory: How Does the Brain Predict Itself?
Metamemory: How Does the Brain Predict Itself?
Dr. Alfred W. Kaszniak, Professor and Head, Psychology, presented on March 30, 2010, as the fifth lecture in the University of Arizona College of Science Min...
24:45
Intro. to fMRI - Wk2, Class1, Pt.2: Pattern Classifiers and Machine Learning
Intro. to fMRI - Wk2, Class1, Pt.2: Pattern Classifiers and Machine Learning
Intro. to fMRI - Wk2, Class1, Pt.2: Pattern Classifiers and Machine Learning
Part 2 of the second lecture from the class BCS 513 Introduction to fMRI: Imaging, Computational Analysis and Neural Representations, in the Department of Br...
41:34
Cognitive Sciences Applications in Big Data (General Joint Session at WMSCI 2014)
Cognitive Sciences Applications in Big Data (General Joint Session at WMSCI 2014)
Cognitive Sciences Applications in Big Data (General Joint Session at WMSCI 2014)
"Cognitive Sciences Applications in Big Data"
(General Joint Session at WMSCI 2014)
Dr. Leonid Perlovsky
Harvard University and The Air Force Research Laboratory, USA
Abstract:
Big Data problems have been efficiently addressed with cognitive algorithms modeling mechanisms of the mind. The talk describes cognitive algorithms, their applications to various engineering problems, including Big Data, and their foundations in mathematical models of the mind including higher cognitive abilities. Mechanisms of the mind include concepts, emotions, hierarchy, dynamic logic, and interaction between language and cognition. Big Data analytics requires
80:33
Why Religion Should Be Replaced: Sam Harris on The End of Faith, Danger to Society (2005)
Why Religion Should Be Replaced: Sam Harris on The End of Faith, Danger to Society (2005)
Why Religion Should Be Replaced: Sam Harris on The End of Faith, Danger to Society (2005)
Religious criticism has a long history. It goes at least as far back as the 5th century BCE in ancient Greece with Diagoras "the atheist" of Melos, and the 1...
46:56
The Addiction Show with Michael Kuhar, Ph.D. Author of The Addicted Brain
The Addiction Show with Michael Kuhar, Ph.D. Author of The Addicted Brain
The Addiction Show with Michael Kuhar, Ph.D. Author of The Addicted Brain
Dr Kuhar's general interests include how the brain works and what goes wrong in neuropsychiatric disease. He studies many species including man, choosing the best way to answer the question...
58:10
Technological Singularity- The Real End Of The World
Technological Singularity- The Real End Of The World
Technological Singularity- The Real End Of The World
This is in many ways one of those defining moments where all the pieces of a puzzle finally come together. It exposes the endgame scenario of what is really happening behind the scenes currently and our forecast for what the future holds. I spread this message to you all with love and hope you all help me spread it. I curse quite a bit and do so because I am not trying to be anything but myself and am not interested in selling you anything. This is just a bread crumb trail that has led me to what I believe is the true agenda of the most intelligent minds of our time and the grand possibilities yet grim implications of what it all can mean to
22:35
Doris Tsao: 2010 Allen Institute for Brain Science Symposium
Doris Tsao: 2010 Allen Institute for Brain Science Symposium
Doris Tsao: 2010 Allen Institute for Brain Science Symposium
Doris Tsao, California Institute of Technology "Mechanisms for face recognition" 2010 Allen Institute for Brain Science Symposium.
20:14
Temple Grandin: The world needs all kinds of minds
Temple Grandin: The world needs all kinds of minds
Temple Grandin: The world needs all kinds of minds
http://www.ted.com Autism activist Temple Grandin talks about how her mind works -- sharing her ability to "think in pictures," which helps her solve problem...
Modern neuroscience is generating data at a staggering and rapidly increasing pace. With so much data suddenly available, the opportunity to make new discove...
Modern neuroscience is generating data at a staggering and rapidly increasing pace. With so much data suddenly available, the opportunity to make new discove...
Expanding on this month's issue of JACC:Cardiovascular Imaging which includes an article "Intelligent Platforms for Disease Assessment: Novel Approaches in F...
Expanding on this month's issue of JACC:Cardiovascular Imaging which includes an article "Intelligent Platforms for Disease Assessment: Novel Approaches in F...
September 30 2013 COSI Seminar by Amit Ashok Assistant Professor, College of Optical Sciences, ECE Department, University of Arizona. "A Task Specific Approa...
September 30 2013 COSI Seminar by Amit Ashok Assistant Professor, College of Optical Sciences, ECE Department, University of Arizona. "A Task Specific Approa...
À l'occasion de Cervorama, exposition interactive organisée par Cap Sciences à Bordeaux jusqu'au 5 janvier 2014, Daniel Choquet, directeur de recherche au CN...
À l'occasion de Cervorama, exposition interactive organisée par Cap Sciences à Bordeaux jusqu'au 5 janvier 2014, Daniel Choquet, directeur de recherche au CN...
Thinking with your Body and Other Things
David Kirsh, Department of Cognitive Science, UCSD
ABSTRACT: Where does thought, creativity and understanding come from? For the past five years I have been studying the creative practice of a super expert choreographer. I have also been studying problem solving, design thinking and new approaches to situated cognition. A common element running through these studies is that in natural contexts people use resources of all sorts to think with. They use their bodies, their gestures, instruments, tools, representations and everyday objects. The simple thesis I advance is that people often think their ideas through by modeling them. The models they create are partial and personal. Sometimes these models are encoded in recognized forms: words, drawings, writing. But often people use their body to create a partial model of the thing they are trying to understand. For instance, when thinking through the structure of a movement, dancers will usually ‘mark’ the movement rather than dance it full out. Marking is a movement reduction system like gesturing. This external modeling is itself a form of thinking because it is directed, interactive and representational. It should be regarded as being as important to thought as the other modalities of expression, such as speaking, that are unambiguously expressions and enactions of thought.
To defend this view I describe how thought often relies on active perception enhanced by mental projection. Because interacting with things, including moving our bodies, can improve projection it forms part of an interactive strategy for thinking. This explains how we can harness the analog computation performed by moving objects to share the computational effort of thought, and so keep thought moving forward.
BIO: David Kirsh is Professor and past chair of the Department of Cognitive Science at UCSD. He was educated at Oxford University (D.Phil), did post doctoral research at MIT in the Artificial Intelligence Lab, and has held research or visiting professor positions at MIT and Stanford University. He has written extensively on situated, distributed and embodied cognition and especially on how the environment can be shaped to simplify and extend cognition, including how we intelligently use space, and how we use external representations as an interactive tool for thought. He runs the Interactive Cognition Lab at UCSD where the focus is on the way humans are closely coupled to the outside world, and how cognitive principles can be used to improve the shape, design and our felt experience of environments. Some recent projects focus on ways humans use their bodies as things to think with, specifically in dance making and choreographic cognition. He teaches courses on Design, Special Projects, Creativity and Studio based work. He is Associate Director of the Arthur C. Clarke Center for Human Imagination, he is Research Advisor for Wayne McGregor | Random Dance company, he is Adjunct Professor at the Laban Conservatoire of Dance and Music, London, and he is on the board of directors for the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture. Representative publications are: The Intelligent Use of Space, Adapting the World Instead of Oneself, Why We Use Our Hands When We think, Situated Cognition and Problem Solving, Explaining Artifact Evolution, Thinking with External Representations, Embodied Cognition and the Magical Future of Interaction Design.
Thinking with your Body and Other Things
David Kirsh, Department of Cognitive Science, UCSD
ABSTRACT: Where does thought, creativity and understanding come from? For the past five years I have been studying the creative practice of a super expert choreographer. I have also been studying problem solving, design thinking and new approaches to situated cognition. A common element running through these studies is that in natural contexts people use resources of all sorts to think with. They use their bodies, their gestures, instruments, tools, representations and everyday objects. The simple thesis I advance is that people often think their ideas through by modeling them. The models they create are partial and personal. Sometimes these models are encoded in recognized forms: words, drawings, writing. But often people use their body to create a partial model of the thing they are trying to understand. For instance, when thinking through the structure of a movement, dancers will usually ‘mark’ the movement rather than dance it full out. Marking is a movement reduction system like gesturing. This external modeling is itself a form of thinking because it is directed, interactive and representational. It should be regarded as being as important to thought as the other modalities of expression, such as speaking, that are unambiguously expressions and enactions of thought.
To defend this view I describe how thought often relies on active perception enhanced by mental projection. Because interacting with things, including moving our bodies, can improve projection it forms part of an interactive strategy for thinking. This explains how we can harness the analog computation performed by moving objects to share the computational effort of thought, and so keep thought moving forward.
BIO: David Kirsh is Professor and past chair of the Department of Cognitive Science at UCSD. He was educated at Oxford University (D.Phil), did post doctoral research at MIT in the Artificial Intelligence Lab, and has held research or visiting professor positions at MIT and Stanford University. He has written extensively on situated, distributed and embodied cognition and especially on how the environment can be shaped to simplify and extend cognition, including how we intelligently use space, and how we use external representations as an interactive tool for thought. He runs the Interactive Cognition Lab at UCSD where the focus is on the way humans are closely coupled to the outside world, and how cognitive principles can be used to improve the shape, design and our felt experience of environments. Some recent projects focus on ways humans use their bodies as things to think with, specifically in dance making and choreographic cognition. He teaches courses on Design, Special Projects, Creativity and Studio based work. He is Associate Director of the Arthur C. Clarke Center for Human Imagination, he is Research Advisor for Wayne McGregor | Random Dance company, he is Adjunct Professor at the Laban Conservatoire of Dance and Music, London, and he is on the board of directors for the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture. Representative publications are: The Intelligent Use of Space, Adapting the World Instead of Oneself, Why We Use Our Hands When We think, Situated Cognition and Problem Solving, Explaining Artifact Evolution, Thinking with External Representations, Embodied Cognition and the Magical Future of Interaction Design.
Dr. Alfred W. Kaszniak, Professor and Head, Psychology, presented on March 30, 2010, as the fifth lecture in the University of Arizona College of Science Min...
Dr. Alfred W. Kaszniak, Professor and Head, Psychology, presented on March 30, 2010, as the fifth lecture in the University of Arizona College of Science Min...
Part 2 of the second lecture from the class BCS 513 Introduction to fMRI: Imaging, Computational Analysis and Neural Representations, in the Department of Br...
Part 2 of the second lecture from the class BCS 513 Introduction to fMRI: Imaging, Computational Analysis and Neural Representations, in the Department of Br...
"Cognitive Sciences Applications in Big Data"
(General Joint Session at WMSCI 2014)
Dr. Leonid Perlovsky
Harvard University and The Air Force Research Laboratory, USA
Abstract:
Big Data problems have been efficiently addressed with cognitive algorithms modeling mechanisms of the mind. The talk describes cognitive algorithms, their applications to various engineering problems, including Big Data, and their foundations in mathematical models of the mind including higher cognitive abilities. Mechanisms of the mind include concepts, emotions, hierarchy, dynamic logic, and interaction between language and cognition. Big Data analytics requires algorithms modeling all these abilities. Machine learning, artificial intelligence, and modeling of the mind has been plagued by computational complexity since the 1960s. Dynamic logic overcomes computational complexity when analyzing Big Data. It is a process-logic, which replaces classical logic; it serves as a basis for cognitive algorithms and for a mathematical theory of learning, combining the mechanisms of the mind into a hierarchical system of mental processes. Each process proceeds "from vague to crisp," from vague representation-concepts to crisp ones. Brain imaging experiments (Bar et al 2006; Kveraga et al 2007) confirmed this as an adequate model of the brain perception and cognition.
Computational difficulty is related to Gödelian problems in logic: computational complexity is a manifestation of Gödelian incompleteness in finite systems, such as computers or brains. The mind is "not logical." Dynamic logic overcomes this difficulty. Engineering applications demonstrate orders of magnitude improvement in Big Data analytics, data mining, information integration, financial predictions, genetic studies, cybersecurity.
The talk presents the dual hierarchy model of interactions between language and cognition. It enables integrating language, text, and sensor data. A number of "mysteries" in this interaction are explained: what is the difference between them; what is the role of language in cognition, why children can talk before they really understand, how much adults are different from children in this respect, etc. These are explained in the model, and explanations are confirmed in brain imaging experiments (Binder et al 2005; Price 2012). Much difficulties in developing Big Data algorithms are related to confusing language and cognition.
The knowledge instinct drives acquisition of cognitive ability and is a foundation of all our higher cognitive abilities. Its satisfaction is experienced as aesthetic emotions (experimentally confirmed in Cabanac et al 2010). Efficient engineering algorithms must model these emotional abilities (Perlovsky, Deming, Ilin, 2011). The hierarchy of aesthetic emotions is discussed from understanding of everyday objects, to understanding of abstract concepts throughout the hierarchy, to the near top of the mental hierarchy. Contents of these "highest" concepts are discussed and the corresponding aesthetic emotions are related to the beautiful. Experimental tests of this conjecture are for the near future.
Contradictions among knowledge are experienced as negative aesthetic emotions, cognitive dissonance. Development of robots and human-computer interactions require algorithms modeling this ability. Cognitive dissonance counteracts the knowledge instinct and would prevent accumulation of knowledge and the entire human evolution, if not a special ability evolved for overcoming these emotions. It follows from the dual hierarchy model that this mechanism is music. This theoretical prediction has been experimentally confirmed (Masataka et al 2012, 2013, Cabanac et al, 2013). This explains the origin and evolution of music, what Darwin called the greatest mystery.
"Cognitive Sciences Applications in Big Data"
(General Joint Session at WMSCI 2014)
Dr. Leonid Perlovsky
Harvard University and The Air Force Research Laboratory, USA
Abstract:
Big Data problems have been efficiently addressed with cognitive algorithms modeling mechanisms of the mind. The talk describes cognitive algorithms, their applications to various engineering problems, including Big Data, and their foundations in mathematical models of the mind including higher cognitive abilities. Mechanisms of the mind include concepts, emotions, hierarchy, dynamic logic, and interaction between language and cognition. Big Data analytics requires algorithms modeling all these abilities. Machine learning, artificial intelligence, and modeling of the mind has been plagued by computational complexity since the 1960s. Dynamic logic overcomes computational complexity when analyzing Big Data. It is a process-logic, which replaces classical logic; it serves as a basis for cognitive algorithms and for a mathematical theory of learning, combining the mechanisms of the mind into a hierarchical system of mental processes. Each process proceeds "from vague to crisp," from vague representation-concepts to crisp ones. Brain imaging experiments (Bar et al 2006; Kveraga et al 2007) confirmed this as an adequate model of the brain perception and cognition.
Computational difficulty is related to Gödelian problems in logic: computational complexity is a manifestation of Gödelian incompleteness in finite systems, such as computers or brains. The mind is "not logical." Dynamic logic overcomes this difficulty. Engineering applications demonstrate orders of magnitude improvement in Big Data analytics, data mining, information integration, financial predictions, genetic studies, cybersecurity.
The talk presents the dual hierarchy model of interactions between language and cognition. It enables integrating language, text, and sensor data. A number of "mysteries" in this interaction are explained: what is the difference between them; what is the role of language in cognition, why children can talk before they really understand, how much adults are different from children in this respect, etc. These are explained in the model, and explanations are confirmed in brain imaging experiments (Binder et al 2005; Price 2012). Much difficulties in developing Big Data algorithms are related to confusing language and cognition.
The knowledge instinct drives acquisition of cognitive ability and is a foundation of all our higher cognitive abilities. Its satisfaction is experienced as aesthetic emotions (experimentally confirmed in Cabanac et al 2010). Efficient engineering algorithms must model these emotional abilities (Perlovsky, Deming, Ilin, 2011). The hierarchy of aesthetic emotions is discussed from understanding of everyday objects, to understanding of abstract concepts throughout the hierarchy, to the near top of the mental hierarchy. Contents of these "highest" concepts are discussed and the corresponding aesthetic emotions are related to the beautiful. Experimental tests of this conjecture are for the near future.
Contradictions among knowledge are experienced as negative aesthetic emotions, cognitive dissonance. Development of robots and human-computer interactions require algorithms modeling this ability. Cognitive dissonance counteracts the knowledge instinct and would prevent accumulation of knowledge and the entire human evolution, if not a special ability evolved for overcoming these emotions. It follows from the dual hierarchy model that this mechanism is music. This theoretical prediction has been experimentally confirmed (Masataka et al 2012, 2013, Cabanac et al, 2013). This explains the origin and evolution of music, what Darwin called the greatest mystery.
published:17 Aug 2014
views:133
Why Religion Should Be Replaced: Sam Harris on The End of Faith, Danger to Society (2005)
Religious criticism has a long history. It goes at least as far back as the 5th century BCE in ancient Greece with Diagoras "the atheist" of Melos, and the 1...
Religious criticism has a long history. It goes at least as far back as the 5th century BCE in ancient Greece with Diagoras "the atheist" of Melos, and the 1...
Dr Kuhar's general interests include how the brain works and what goes wrong in neuropsychiatric disease. He studies many species including man, choosing the best way to answer the question...
Dr Kuhar's general interests include how the brain works and what goes wrong in neuropsychiatric disease. He studies many species including man, choosing the best way to answer the question...
This is in many ways one of those defining moments where all the pieces of a puzzle finally come together. It exposes the endgame scenario of what is really happening behind the scenes currently and our forecast for what the future holds. I spread this message to you all with love and hope you all help me spread it. I curse quite a bit and do so because I am not trying to be anything but myself and am not interested in selling you anything. This is just a bread crumb trail that has led me to what I believe is the true agenda of the most intelligent minds of our time and the grand possibilities yet grim implications of what it all can mean to us as a species. Prepare to understand what the "actual" new age will mean for us all and the choices that we make that will shape it's future. This is dedicated to Bill Cooper!
This is in many ways one of those defining moments where all the pieces of a puzzle finally come together. It exposes the endgame scenario of what is really happening behind the scenes currently and our forecast for what the future holds. I spread this message to you all with love and hope you all help me spread it. I curse quite a bit and do so because I am not trying to be anything but myself and am not interested in selling you anything. This is just a bread crumb trail that has led me to what I believe is the true agenda of the most intelligent minds of our time and the grand possibilities yet grim implications of what it all can mean to us as a species. Prepare to understand what the "actual" new age will mean for us all and the choices that we make that will shape it's future. This is dedicated to Bill Cooper!
published:29 May 2015
views:0
Doris Tsao: 2010 Allen Institute for Brain Science Symposium
http://www.ted.com Autism activist Temple Grandin talks about how her mind works -- sharing her ability to "think in pictures," which helps her solve problem...
http://www.ted.com Autism activist Temple Grandin talks about how her mind works -- sharing her ability to "think in pictures," which helps her solve problem...
Megan deBettencourt started participating in faculty research projects at Columbia since her second year at SEAS. Her senior year, she worked on neuroscience...
10:05
Human brain and growing intelligence
An overview of the human brain and how intelligence can be strengthened though stimulation...
An overview of the human brain and how intelligence can be strengthened though stimulation of the brain. Your brain actually grows when you struggle and make...
13:45
Discovering One's Hidden Psychopathy
Neuroscientist James Fallon discusses how he came to discover, and how he's learned to liv...
Neuroscientist James Fallon discusses how he came to discover, and how he's learned to live with, the fact that he's a borderline psychopath. Fallon is the a...
5:06
Vietnam Veterans Help Neuroscientists Map Emotional Intelligence in the Brain
Cognitive neuroscientist Aron Barbey explores the link between general and emotional intel...
Cognitive neuroscientist Aron Barbey explores the link between general and emotional intelligence by studying Vietnam veterans with focal brain injuries. Usi...
4:00
Neuroscience of Intelligence
Intelligence is a significantly broad topic, and can thus be approached from different ang...
Intelligence is a significantly broad topic, and can thus be approached from different angles. On the one hand, Lefebvre (2011) maintains that innovation con...
70:26
RI Seminar: Stefan Schaal : From Movement Primitives to Associative Skill Memories
Stefan Schaal Professor of Computer Science, Neuroscience, and Biomedical Engineering, Uni...
Stefan Schaal Professor of Computer Science, Neuroscience, and Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern California March 28, 2014 Abstract Controlling ...
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Inside the Mind of a Sociopath
Sociopaths aren't just movie characters and mass murders. Turns out 1 in 25 people suffer ...
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2:28
Investigating Intelligence - A conversation with John Duncan (Preview)
You can watch the full conversation on our website (www.ideasroadshow.com) or iPad app on ...
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Intelligence and the Brain: Recent Advances in Understanding How the Brain Works with Jeff Hawkins
Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) How the brain creates intelligence is viewed by many as the gr...
Visit: http://www.uctv.tv/) How the brain creates intelligence is viewed by many as the greatest scientific quest of all time. We are living at the time whe...
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In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence [Part 1]
This video is part 1 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 2 -http://...
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22:36
In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part [2]
This video is part 2 of 2 In Motion Broadcast IV - Artificial Intelligence Part 1 - http:/...
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9:51
Estimating Markets through Behavioral Biomimicry: Alex Terrazas at TEDxSacramento
Estimating Markets in the Developing World through Satellite Intelligence and Behavioral B...
Estimating Markets in the Developing World through Satellite Intelligence and Behavioral Biomimicry Can we estimate economic activity from the sky? Can we sa...
51:52
Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?
http://facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Meeting Einstein Lecture: "Challenges of Neuroscienc...
http://facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Meeting Einstein Lecture: "Challenges of Neuroscience - Who are we and if so, why?" - Roger D. Traub, State University ...
4:25
Would You Vote for a Psychopath?
Neuroscientist and self-described psychopath James Fallon discusses the psychopathic tende...
Neuroscientist and self-described psychopath James Fallon discusses the psychopathic tendencies of leaders and madmen. Fallon is the author of The Psychopath...
Modern neuroscience is generating data at a staggering and rapidly increasing pace. With so much data suddenly available, the opportunity to make new discove...
56:19
Miniaturization of Medicine and its Impact on Cardiology
Expanding on this month's issue of JACC:Cardiovascular Imaging which includes an article "...
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65:46
Amit Ashok 2013
September 30 2013 COSI Seminar by Amit Ashok Assistant Professor, College of Optical Scien...
September 30 2013 COSI Seminar by Amit Ashok Assistant Professor, College of Optical Sciences, ECE Department, University of Arizona. "A Task Specific Approa...
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Qu'est-ce qu'un cerveau ?
À l'occasion de Cervorama, exposition interactive organisée par Cap Sciences à Bordeaux ju...
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39:03
Processors for Intelligent Machines
...
published:01 Oct 2014
Processors for Intelligent Machines
Processors for Intelligent Machines
published:01 Oct 2014
views:26
64:17
Design at Large - David Kirsh, Thinking with your Body and Other Things
Thinking with your Body and Other Things
David Kirsh, Department of Cognitive Science, UC...
published:21 Oct 2014
Design at Large - David Kirsh, Thinking with your Body and Other Things
Design at Large - David Kirsh, Thinking with your Body and Other Things
published:21 Oct 2014
views:1
Thinking with your Body and Other Things
David Kirsh, Department of Cognitive Science, UCSD
ABSTRACT: Where does thought, creativity and understanding come from? For the past five years I have been studying the creative practice of a super expert choreographer. I have also been studying problem solving, design thinking and new approaches to situated cognition. A common element running through these studies is that in natural contexts people use resources of all sorts to think with. They use their bodies, their gestures, instruments, tools, representations and everyday objects. The simple thesis I advance is that people often think their ideas through by modeling them. The models they create are partial and personal. Sometimes these models are encoded in recognized forms: words, drawings, writing. But often people use their body to create a partial model of the thing they are trying to understand. For instance, when thinking through the structure of a movement, dancers will usually ‘mark’ the movement rather than dance it full out. Marking is a movement reduction system like gesturing. This external modeling is itself a form of thinking because it is directed, interactive and representational. It should be regarded as being as important to thought as the other modalities of expression, such as speaking, that are unambiguously expressions and enactions of thought.
To defend this view I describe how thought often relies on active perception enhanced by mental projection. Because interacting with things, including moving our bodies, can improve projection it forms part of an interactive strategy for thinking. This explains how we can harness the analog computation performed by moving objects to share the computational effort of thought, and so keep thought moving forward.
BIO: David Kirsh is Professor and past chair of the Department of Cognitive Science at UCSD. He was educated at Oxford University (D.Phil), did post doctoral research at MIT in the Artificial Intelligence Lab, and has held research or visiting professor positions at MIT and Stanford University. He has written extensively on situated, distributed and embodied cognition and especially on how the environment can be shaped to simplify and extend cognition, including how we intelligently use space, and how we use external representations as an interactive tool for thought. He runs the Interactive Cognition Lab at UCSD where the focus is on the way humans are closely coupled to the outside world, and how cognitive principles can be used to improve the shape, design and our felt experience of environments. Some recent projects focus on ways humans use their bodies as things to think with, specifically in dance making and choreographic cognition. He teaches courses on Design, Special Projects, Creativity and Studio based work. He is Associate Director of the Arthur C. Clarke Center for Human Imagination, he is Research Advisor for Wayne McGregor | Random Dance company, he is Adjunct Professor at the Laban Conservatoire of Dance and Music, London, and he is on the board of directors for the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture. Representative publications are: The Intelligent Use of Space, Adapting the World Instead of Oneself, Why We Use Our Hands When We think, Situated Cognition and Problem Solving, Explaining Artifact Evolution, Thinking with External Representations, Embodied Cognition and the Magical Future of Interaction Design.
53:17
Metamemory: How Does the Brain Predict Itself?
Dr. Alfred W. Kaszniak, Professor and Head, Psychology, presented on March 30, 2010, as th...
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24:45
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Part 2 of the second lecture from the class BCS 513 Introduction to fMRI: Imaging, Computa...
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41:34
Cognitive Sciences Applications in Big Data (General Joint Session at WMSCI 2014)
"Cognitive Sciences Applications in Big Data"
(General Joint Session at WMSCI 2014)
Dr. L...
published:17 Aug 2014
Cognitive Sciences Applications in Big Data (General Joint Session at WMSCI 2014)
Cognitive Sciences Applications in Big Data (General Joint Session at WMSCI 2014)
published:17 Aug 2014
views:133
"Cognitive Sciences Applications in Big Data"
(General Joint Session at WMSCI 2014)
Dr. Leonid Perlovsky
Harvard University and The Air Force Research Laboratory, USA
Abstract:
Big Data problems have been efficiently addressed with cognitive algorithms modeling mechanisms of the mind. The talk describes cognitive algorithms, their applications to various engineering problems, including Big Data, and their foundations in mathematical models of the mind including higher cognitive abilities. Mechanisms of the mind include concepts, emotions, hierarchy, dynamic logic, and interaction between language and cognition. Big Data analytics requires algorithms modeling all these abilities. Machine learning, artificial intelligence, and modeling of the mind has been plagued by computational complexity since the 1960s. Dynamic logic overcomes computational complexity when analyzing Big Data. It is a process-logic, which replaces classical logic; it serves as a basis for cognitive algorithms and for a mathematical theory of learning, combining the mechanisms of the mind into a hierarchical system of mental processes. Each process proceeds "from vague to crisp," from vague representation-concepts to crisp ones. Brain imaging experiments (Bar et al 2006; Kveraga et al 2007) confirmed this as an adequate model of the brain perception and cognition.
Computational difficulty is related to Gödelian problems in logic: computational complexity is a manifestation of Gödelian incompleteness in finite systems, such as computers or brains. The mind is "not logical." Dynamic logic overcomes this difficulty. Engineering applications demonstrate orders of magnitude improvement in Big Data analytics, data mining, information integration, financial predictions, genetic studies, cybersecurity.
The talk presents the dual hierarchy model of interactions between language and cognition. It enables integrating language, text, and sensor data. A number of "mysteries" in this interaction are explained: what is the difference between them; what is the role of language in cognition, why children can talk before they really understand, how much adults are different from children in this respect, etc. These are explained in the model, and explanations are confirmed in brain imaging experiments (Binder et al 2005; Price 2012). Much difficulties in developing Big Data algorithms are related to confusing language and cognition.
The knowledge instinct drives acquisition of cognitive ability and is a foundation of all our higher cognitive abilities. Its satisfaction is experienced as aesthetic emotions (experimentally confirmed in Cabanac et al 2010). Efficient engineering algorithms must model these emotional abilities (Perlovsky, Deming, Ilin, 2011). The hierarchy of aesthetic emotions is discussed from understanding of everyday objects, to understanding of abstract concepts throughout the hierarchy, to the near top of the mental hierarchy. Contents of these "highest" concepts are discussed and the corresponding aesthetic emotions are related to the beautiful. Experimental tests of this conjecture are for the near future.
Contradictions among knowledge are experienced as negative aesthetic emotions, cognitive dissonance. Development of robots and human-computer interactions require algorithms modeling this ability. Cognitive dissonance counteracts the knowledge instinct and would prevent accumulation of knowledge and the entire human evolution, if not a special ability evolved for overcoming these emotions. It follows from the dual hierarchy model that this mechanism is music. This theoretical prediction has been experimentally confirmed (Masataka et al 2012, 2013, Cabanac et al, 2013). This explains the origin and evolution of music, what Darwin called the greatest mystery.
80:33
Why Religion Should Be Replaced: Sam Harris on The End of Faith, Danger to Society (2005)
Religious criticism has a long history. It goes at least as far back as the 5th century BC...
Religious criticism has a long history. It goes at least as far back as the 5th century BCE in ancient Greece with Diagoras "the atheist" of Melos, and the 1...
46:56
The Addiction Show with Michael Kuhar, Ph.D. Author of The Addicted Brain
Dr Kuhar's general interests include how the brain works and what goes wrong in neuropsych...
Dr Kuhar's general interests include how the brain works and what goes wrong in neuropsychiatric disease. He studies many species including man, choosing the best way to answer the question...
58:10
Technological Singularity- The Real End Of The World
This is in many ways one of those defining moments where all the pieces of a puzzle finall...
published:29 May 2015
Technological Singularity- The Real End Of The World
Technological Singularity- The Real End Of The World
published:29 May 2015
views:0
This is in many ways one of those defining moments where all the pieces of a puzzle finally come together. It exposes the endgame scenario of what is really happening behind the scenes currently and our forecast for what the future holds. I spread this message to you all with love and hope you all help me spread it. I curse quite a bit and do so because I am not trying to be anything but myself and am not interested in selling you anything. This is just a bread crumb trail that has led me to what I believe is the true agenda of the most intelligent minds of our time and the grand possibilities yet grim implications of what it all can mean to us as a species. Prepare to understand what the "actual" new age will mean for us all and the choices that we make that will shape it's future. This is dedicated to Bill Cooper!
22:35
Doris Tsao: 2010 Allen Institute for Brain Science Symposium
Doris Tsao, California Institute of Technology "Mechanisms for face recognition" 2010 Alle...
http://www.ted.com Autism activist Temple Grandin talks about how her mind works -- sharing her ability to "think in pictures," which helps her solve problem...
PhysicistBrian Greene has a wonderful essay in October’s Smithsonian magazine on the centennial of Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity. But then it all seemed to collapse ... The empirical research frontier? Detecting gravitational waves ... ....
The Iraqi military has officially announced it is to begin sharing "security and intelligence" information with Russia, Syria and Iran to help combat the advances of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group. A statement issued by the Iraqi Joint Operations Command said the countries would "help and cooperate in collecting information about the terrorist Daesh group (using the Arabic acronym for ISIL)." ... Source... ....
Saudi Arabia's most senior cleric, the grand mufti, has said Thursday's stampede that killed more than 700 people at the annual Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca was beyond human control. He told the interior minister, Crown PrinceMohammed bin Nayef, that he was not to blame for the tragedy. Iran and several other countries have criticised Saudi authorities for the way they handled safety issues ...KingSalman has ordered a safety review ... ....
Dressed in bright formal wear and hopping a bicycle, scooter and autorickshaw, DMKTreasurerM K Stalin has gone in for a rapid image makeover, in a bid to reach out to the people especially youth, ahead of the Assembly elections in Tamil Nadu next year ... ....
Dressed in bright formal wear and hopping a bicycle, scooter and autorickshaw, DMKTreasurerM K Stalin has gone in for a rapid image makeover, in a bid to reach out to the people especially youth, ah... ....
Dressed in bright formal wear and hopping a bicycle, scooter and autorickshaw, DMKTreasurerM K Stalin has gone in for a rapid image makeover, in a bid to reach out to the people especially youth, ah... ....
A 69-year-old Michigan man was charged on Wednesday for possessing child pornography and raping an 8-year-old girl with Down syndrome. According to Fox 17, David Heinsen was in possession of over 650,000images and 3,000 videos depicting the rape and torture of children. In 1989, he allegedly raped an 8-year-old neighbor with Down syndrome and... ....
(Source. Aston Villa plc). Check out our picture gallery from the Barclays Premier League clash against Liverpool. Take a look at our MATCHIMAGES... The former Blackburn hitman twice pulled the claret and blues back into the game ... Take a look at our MATCH IMAGES. distributed by ... (noodl. 30054312) ....
... The former professional airborne photographer emigrated to Queensland last year and now lives at Murrumba Downs ... The images were taken from the Kangaroo Point cliffs ... ... ....
Chennai. Dressed in bright formal wear and hopping a bicycle, scooter and autorickshaw, DMKTreasurerM K Stalin has gone in for a rapid image makeover, in a bid to reach out to people especially the youth, ahead of the assembly elections in Tamil Nadu which will be held next year ...MK Stalin seen sporting track pants and sneakers (Photo ... However, the ruling AIADMK and PMK have pooh-poohed the campaign and Stalin'simage makeover ... ....
Panaji. Goa is defined as the party destination and a world holiday destination. But since the state is struggling financially, despite having one of the highest per capita income and literacy rate in the country, an attempt is being made to change the state's image. The perception of 365 days on a holiday is slowly making way with international power-brokers and trade bodies recognizing the business potential Goa has ... ....
The biggest little city in the world isn't big enough yet to draw millennial visitors from the San Francisco Bay Area, researchers told officials this week ... ....
IT is so! The United States athletics team were even intimidated by a drink with Jamaican sprint sensation Usain Bolt's image on the label ... Now, the JamaicaAdministrativeAthleticsAssociation (JAAA) has confirmed earlier talk that the USA squad members flatly decided against even taking a sip. "That's a fact ... "The hype going into the 100m final suggested that (Justin) Gatlin would have triumphed ... So we said, give it to us ... ....