You’ve got a nerve
Narrowing the gap between biological brains and electronic ones
SINCE nobody really knows how brains work, those researching them must often resort to analogies. A common one is that a brain is a sort of squishy, imprecise, biological version of a digital computer. But analogies work both ways, and computer scientists have a long history of trying to improve their creations by taking ideas from biology. The trendy and rapidly developing branch of artificial intelligence known as “deep learning”, for instance, takes much of its inspiration from the way biological brains are put together.
This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “You’ve got a nerve”
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