Talking Algorithms

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Talking Algorithms

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Research document



1. The human brain


   Realbrain.jpg


Your brain is made up of billions of brain cells called neurons, which use electricity to communicate with each other. The combination of millions of neurons sending signals at once produces an enormous amount of electrical activity in the brain, which can be detected using sensitive medical equipment (such as an EEG), measuring electricity levels over areas of the scalp.



1.1 Brain Structures


   Brain relation.jpg


Frontal Lobe- associated with reasoning, planning, parts of speech, movement, emotions, and problem solving

Parietal Lobe- associated with movement, orientation, recognition, perception of stimuli

Occipital Lobe- associated with visual processing

Temporal Lobe- associated with perception and recognition of auditory stimuli, memory, and speech



1.2 Brain landscape

Microscopic images of the brain


Visual-cortex.jpg


Brain23.jpg    3  Brain22.jpg


Brain21.jpg



    1. Microscopic image of a neuron thumbnail, respect user preferences for image width, but without border and no right float

    2. Microscopic blood vessels that carry nutrients to neurons in the brain.

    3. No other then thumbnail, respect user preferences for image width, but without border and no right



1.3 Brain Communication


   Nm.gif


The cutting-edge science of changing your mind.

This image displays the beautiful phenomena where the brain makes new connections. The brain does this when it gathers new information and/or forms new relationships between data. I find this extremely fascinating, I was amazed and truly moved when I saw these neurons connecting, experiencing it as poetry.



   Brainctivity.gif 


   Brainactivity4.jpg   Brainactivity2.jpg


   Brainactivity3.jpg


The Glass Brain

This is an anatomically-realistic 3D brain visualization depicting real-time source-localized activity (power and “effective” connectivity) from EEG (electroencephalographic) signals. Each color represents inferred source power and connectivity in a different frequency band (theta, alpha, beta, gamma) and the golden lines are white matter anatomical fiber tracts. Estimated information transfer between brain regions is visualized as pulses of light flowing along the fiber tracts connecting the regions.

Video the Glass Brain [1]



   Brainchip.png



1.4 Brain Decoding


Brainactivity1.png


[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nsjDnYxJ0bo]


2. The Computer (and the brain)


   Microcomp.jpg   Microcomp2.jpg


2.1 Brain decoding



2.2 The computer vs the brain



3. Artificial Intelligence


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Artificial intelligence (AI) is intelligence exhibited by machines. In computer science, an ideal "intelligent" machine is a flexible rational agent that perceives its environment and takes actions that maximize its chance of success at some goal.[1] Colloquially, the term "artificial intelligence" is applied when a machine mimics "cognitive" functions that humans associate with other human minds, such as "learning" and "problem solving"


3.1 History of Artificial Intelligence


Artintelligence2.gif


Artintelligence3.gif    3  Losing.jpg



3.2 Turing test


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   Alan M Turing and colleagues working on the Ferranti Mark I Computer in 1951.



3.3 Machine learning


Machine learning is the subfield of computer science that gives computers the ability to learn without being explicitly programmed. Evolved from the study of pattern recognition and computational learning theory in artificial intelligence, machine learning explores the study and construction of algorithms that can learn from and make predictions on data. Such algorithms overcome following strictly static program instructions by making data driven predictions or decisions through building a model from sample inputs.


   Chatbot01.png       Chatbot02.png


Tay

Microsoft chatbot Tay was an artificial intelligence chatterbot released by Microsoft Corporation on March 23, 2016. Tay caused controversy on Twitter by releasing inflammatory tweets and it was taken offline around 16 hours after its launch. Tay was designed to mimic the language patterns of a 19-year-old American girl, and to learn from interacting with human users of Twitter. Tay however started posting anti-semetic and racist tweets. Artificial intelligence researcher Roman Yampolskiy commented that Tay's misbehaviour was understandable, because it was mimicking the deliberately offensive behavior of other Twitter users, and Microsoft had not given the bot an understanding of inappropriate behaviour.



3.4 Chatbots



Chatbot1.png

Chatbot2.png

Eviebot v.s sexchatbot


Destroyhumanity.png


4.Talking Algorithms



5. Reflection