by Carlhole » Tue 24 Nov 2009, 18:36:32
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Isochroma', 'S')ometimes a lie can be the most interesting doorway into the realm of the true. May it intake flocks of the innocent like the black hole that it is.
That's just sounds like a mystical bunch of BS to me.
I look at the Blue Brain Project as the most serious attempt so far to understand the workings of the human brain; it can only improve from here. Everything is in existence now to do this modeling - except maybe the gigantaf---inormous amount of memory and processing power needed to do something that supercomputing scientists think maybe possible. When you get into the whole approach, everything appears reasonable and practical - even if it is expensive and possibly fails to do what is expected.
...But someone's got to at least try. And Dr. Markham is the foremost researcher-engineer doing this in the world, I believe.
It has other applications besides computer research or as a sci-fi subject: you could possibly design new drugs that ideally affect neuron behavior... You could learn more about things like bi-polar or schizophrenia...
Also, lots of animal research going on in neuroscience. Dr. Markhman pointed out to everybody that "at some point you have to prepared to quit doing animal research". And he's right, whether or not you think consciousness might somehow immediately emerge from building this thing - it probably won't at first... But animal research is just
too limited for what they need to explore. Which is. "How does brain microstructure yield vastly cheap and powerful information processing"? If Markham is able to make some discoveries, maybe they'll yield more capable chips - or go on to some different kind of computing entirely. You could look at this story and decide that it was more about the progress of supercomputing and ongoing computer design than it is about digitally reproducing a
real but virtual human neocortex - one that would do all kinds of tricks for us. The kids in the 50's woulda dug it, man.
So supercomputers are the main tool to for discovering how the brain works on a small, basic level. It's a mystery. These kind of advanced macnines are needed everywhere and there is a lot of international competition going on in the field. The US is still ahead. But the Chinese just build t their first machine. These things are needed to do a whole lot of other stuff besides studying the brain. There's a huge market out there for better faster, smarter machines. There's also a lot of interest in building climate-modeling supercomputers or fusion simulators.