> https://www.salon.com/2021/04/30/why-artificial-intelligence-research-might-be-going-down-a-dead-end/
"Colin Hales, an artificial intelligence researcher at the University
of Melbourne, has observed how strange it is that AI scientists have
not yet tried to create an artificial brain in the same way other
scientists have made artificial hearts, stomachs, or livers. Instead,
AI researchers have created theoretical models of neuron patterns
without their corresponding physics. It is as if instead of building
airplanes, AI researchers are designing flight simulators that never
leave the ground, Hales says"
<sarcasmo>
Se c'è qualcuno che volesse seguire i "suggerimenti" di Hales,
consiglierei di iniziare con un cervello di un tardigrado [1], un
minuscolo "super" invertebrato, definito la "specie più resiliente al
mondo" (andate su wikipedia per scoprire il perché).
Ha *solo* 200 neuroni, direi che, paragonati ai 100 miliardi del
cervello umano è come, per un programmatore, partire con un "hello
world".
</sarcasmo>
Antonio
[1] https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tardigrada
_______________________________________________
nexa mailing list
nexa@server-nexa.polito.it
https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa