After Digital: Computation as Done by Brains and Machines

After Digital: Computation as Done by Brains and Machines

by James A. Anderson
After Digital: Computation as Done by Brains and Machines

After Digital: Computation as Done by Brains and Machines

by James A. Anderson

eBook

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Overview

Current computer technology doubles in in power roughly every two years, an increase called "Moore's Law." This constant increase is predicted to come to an end soon. Digital technology will change. Although digital computers dominate today's world, there are alternative ways to "compute" which might be better and more efficient than digital computation. After Digital looks at where the field of computation began and where it might be headed, and offers predictions about a collaborative future relationship between human cognition and mechanical computation. James A. Anderson, a pioneer of biologically inspired neural nets, presents two different kinds of computation-digital and analog--and gives examples of their history, function, and limitations. A third, the brain, falls somewhere in between these two forms, and is suggested as a computer architecture that is more capable of performing some specific important cognitive tasks-perception, reasoning, and intuition, for example- than a digital computer, even though the digital computer is constructed from far faster and more reliable basic elements. Anderson discusses the essentials of brain hardware, in particular, the cerebral cortex, and how cortical structure can influence the form taken by the computational operations underlying cognition. Topics include association, understanding complex systems through analogy, formation of abstractions, the biology of number and its use in arithmetic and mathematics, and computing across scales of organization. These applications, of great human interest, also form the goals of genuine artificial intelligence. After Digital will appeal to a broad cognitive science community, including computer scientists, philosophers, psychologists, and neuroscientists, as well as the curious science layreader, and will help to understand and shape future developments in computation.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199357802
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 03/03/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 31 MB
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About the Author

James A. Anderson has been a member of the faculty of Brown University since 1973 and is now Professor in the Department of Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences. He received an SB in physics and PhD in physiology both from MIT. He has published extensively in the area of computational models for cognition and memory and computational neuroscience.

Table of Contents

Preface Chapter 1: The Past of the Future of Computation Chapter 2: Computing Hardware: Analog Chapter 3: Computing Hardware: Digital Chapter 4: Software: Making a Digital Computer Do Something Useful Chapter 5: Human Understanding of Complex Systems Chapter 6: An Engineer's Introduction to Neuroscience Chapter 7: The Brain Works by Logic Chapter 8: The Brain Doesn't Work by Logic Chapter 9: Association Chapter 10: Cerebral Cortex: Basics Chapter 11: Cerebral Cortex: Columns and Collaterals Chapter 12: Brain Theory: History Chapter 13: Brain Theory: Constraints Chapter 14: Programming Chapter 15: Brain Theory: Numbers Chapter 16: Return to Cognitive Science Chapter 17: Loose Ends: Biological and Artificial Chapter 18: The Near Future Chapter 19: Apotheosis: Yes! Or No? Notes Index
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