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Peter Bentley

Artificial Intelligence in Byte-sized Chunks

  • Lunaahas quotedlast month
    Grey Walter likened their brains to two sensory neurons: one for light, one for touch.
  • Lunaahas quotedlast month
    The Second World War brought devastation and horrific suffering for millions of people. But like all wars, it acted as a catalyst for rapid technological advancement
  • Lukemia Ba7ahas quoted19 days ago
    their own ways at surviving in their respective niches.

    Biological brains
  • b7102003151has quoted22 days ago
    But a world where we have working AI pervasive throughout our technology also means something else. It means that we do not always know if an image or piece of music or even a passage of text is written by a human or not. This blurring of creative authorship challenges our traditional notions of creativity and authenticity in the digital age. And in case you just noticed a change of style, that previous sentence was generated by an AI, when asked to add to the first two sentences in this paragraph.
  • Lunaahas quotedlast month
    robot called Cora (Conditional Reflex Analogue), which was designed to learn how to associate a whistle with a light, inspired by Ivan Pavlov’s experiments with dogs that were trained to salivate at the sound of a bell. Although Cora started life as a robot much like Elmer and Elsie, eventually Grey Walter performed ‘surgery’ and removed the specific learning circuits so he could study this part of the electronic brain on its own.
  • Lunaahas quotedlast month
    Grey Walter used pieces of old alarm clocks and army surplus materials to build two mechanical tortoises called Elmer and Elsie: autonomous battery-operated robots that used a rotating light sensor on the top to detect bright lights and move towards them.
  • Lunaahas quotedlast month
    brain then you could understand it better
  • Lunaahas quotedlast month
    After his experience in studying the human brain using the EEG, he had an idea. Instead of just studying brains, perhaps if you could make a
  • Lunaahas quotedlast month
    Neurobiologist William Grey Walter,
  • Lunaahas quotedlast month
    By the late 1940s and early 1950s, we had the first programmable computers –
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