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right now, we have the ability to simulate single neurons and very small groups of neurons. If we could simulate billions of neurons, would that effectively simulate an entire brain? Would this be AI?

2006-10-28 15:21:19 · 3 answers · asked by abcdefghijk 4 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

3 answers

The real test would be to completely copy a person's mind and memories into the robot brain, and then compare it to the original, to be sure that nothing was left out or got garbled. That would be a form of AI.

But I think that for truly artificial intelligence, you would have to start out with a blank brain, and teach it, raise a robot from 'infancy', as we do with real children. Because the memory would (presumably) be perfect, it would go faster. That is the best way I can think of to get truly social AI.

PS, I'm adding the date and time to all my questions and answers from now on, to make it easier to look up old answers for frequently asked questions. I'd like to encourage everybody to do this. Who knows? Maybe YA will add it as a feature, so we won't have to do it for ourselves after a while! Happy answering!

28 OCT 06, 2242 hrs.

2006-10-28 15:38:05 · answer #1 · answered by cdf-rom 7 · 0 0

Difficult for rights that simulates evolving rapidly

2006-10-29 19:40:51 · answer #2 · answered by Sharif Aly 2 · 0 0

no because if they simulate your brain you wll be crazy

2006-10-28 15:31:13 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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