A.I. & Human Brain Computer Interaction

AI Thread Summary
The brain, regarded as the oldest computer, has evolved over millions of years through an unknown process. It relies on various stimuli from the senses—sight, smell, taste, touch, and hearing—to function effectively. The integration of these stimuli, including subconscious interactions, contributes to many brain functions that remain poorly understood. Future advancements may enable computers to interface directly with the brain, enhancing human capabilities and allowing individuals to achieve their desired potential. However, significant challenges exist regarding the understanding of the brain and mind, leading to a preference for non-human A.I. solutions for the time being. The brain excels at task-oriented functions rather than pure computation, suggesting that insights into its mechanics may not significantly influence the design of future computers.
Poorichard2
Messages
39
Reaction score
0
The brain is the oldest computer known, developed through a process still
undetermined in millions of years. As I see it now the brain is developing
a computer to the level of A.I. (interesting). The brain needs information
to function such as eyes,smell,taste,touch,hearing as forerunners (stimuli)
including many below the conscience level interacting together with the
brain comprising functions many of which are not understood or discovered
yet. To use the wet brain as a natural computer one would have to use
what the brain already uses for incoming information, which by the way is
already been done by attaching probes to fingers,etc.etc. It is only a matter
of time when computers will function with the brain (with safe guards of course)
enabling human beings to become whatever they wish to be. I see in the
future software unlike the ones for computers which function with human brain
information that it understands. Meanwhile critical situations exist with the
human brain and mind as well,until those are answered perhaps the best thing
for now is non-human A.I.:wink:
 
Computer science news on Phys.org
I like the retrofit idea better… Otherwise, understanding the mechanics of the human brain may not have much effect on the design of future computers.

I say this, because… Generally, our brains are better at handling tasks than computing functions. The brain, as a task oriented machine, is better for manipulating the world we live in.
 
In my discussions elsewhere, I've noticed a lot of disagreement regarding AI. A question that comes up is, "Is AI hype?" Unfortunately, when this question is asked, the one asking, as far as I can tell, may mean one of three things which can lead to lots of confusion. I'll list them out now for clarity. 1. Can AI do everything a human can do and how close are we to that? 2. Are corporations and governments using the promise of AI to gain more power for themselves? 3. Are AI and transhumans...
Thread 'ChatGPT Examples, Good and Bad'
I've been experimenting with ChatGPT. Some results are good, some very very bad. I think examples can help expose the properties of this AI. Maybe you can post some of your favorite examples and tell us what they reveal about the properties of this AI. (I had problems with copy/paste of text and formatting, so I'm posting my examples as screen shots. That is a promising start. :smile: But then I provided values V=1, R1=1, R2=2, R3=3 and asked for the value of I. At first, it said...
i am customizing a Linux distro [arch] into love os which I am building to impress my crush. I had an idea to integrate an ai model into the Linux system so it can speak like me but romantically. but I don't know what or how to do. I don't know the basic concept of Linux but yet I am customizing my os purely relying on chat gpt and perplexity. when i ask chat gpt about this it said to fine tune an ai model and integrate to the Linux distro and my friend said for the data to be fed to the ai...
Back
Top