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On the Construction of Artificial Brains

This book presents a first generation of artificial brains, using vision as sample application. An object recognition system is built, using neurons and synapses as exclusive building elements. The system contains a feature pyramid with 8 orientations and 5 resolution levels for 1000 objects and net...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ramacher, Ulrich, von der Malsburg, Christoph
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-00189-5
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1315554
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author Ramacher, Ulrich
von der Malsburg, Christoph
author_facet Ramacher, Ulrich
von der Malsburg, Christoph
author_sort Ramacher, Ulrich
collection CERN
description This book presents a first generation of artificial brains, using vision as sample application. An object recognition system is built, using neurons and synapses as exclusive building elements. The system contains a feature pyramid with 8 orientations and 5 resolution levels for 1000 objects and networks for binding of features into objects. This vision system can recognize objects robustly in the presence of changes in illumination, deformation, distance and pose (as long as object components remain visible). The neuro-synaptic network owes its functional power to the introduction of rapidly modifiable dynamic synapses. These give a network greater pattern recognition capabilities than are achievable with fixed connections. The spatio-temporal correlation structure of patterns is captured by a single synaptic differential equation in a universal way. The correlation can appear as synchronous neural firing, which signals the presence of a feature in a robust way, or binds features into objects. Although in this book we can present only a first generation artificial brain and believe many more generations will have to follow to reach the full power of the human brain, we nevertheless see a new era of computation on the horizon. There were times when computers, with their precision, reliability and blinding speed, were considered to be as superior to the wet matter of our brain as a jet plane is to a sparrow. These times seem to be over, given the fact that digital systems inspired by formal logic and controlled algorithmically - today's computers - are hitting a complexity crisis. A paradigm change is in the air: from the externally organised to the self-organised computer, of which the results described in this book may give an inkling.
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spelling cern-13155542021-04-22T01:12:51Zdoi:10.1007/978-3-642-00189-5http://cds.cern.ch/record/1315554engRamacher, Ulrichvon der Malsburg, ChristophOn the Construction of Artificial BrainsComputing and ComputersThis book presents a first generation of artificial brains, using vision as sample application. An object recognition system is built, using neurons and synapses as exclusive building elements. The system contains a feature pyramid with 8 orientations and 5 resolution levels for 1000 objects and networks for binding of features into objects. This vision system can recognize objects robustly in the presence of changes in illumination, deformation, distance and pose (as long as object components remain visible). The neuro-synaptic network owes its functional power to the introduction of rapidly modifiable dynamic synapses. These give a network greater pattern recognition capabilities than are achievable with fixed connections. The spatio-temporal correlation structure of patterns is captured by a single synaptic differential equation in a universal way. The correlation can appear as synchronous neural firing, which signals the presence of a feature in a robust way, or binds features into objects. Although in this book we can present only a first generation artificial brain and believe many more generations will have to follow to reach the full power of the human brain, we nevertheless see a new era of computation on the horizon. There were times when computers, with their precision, reliability and blinding speed, were considered to be as superior to the wet matter of our brain as a jet plane is to a sparrow. These times seem to be over, given the fact that digital systems inspired by formal logic and controlled algorithmically - today's computers - are hitting a complexity crisis. A paradigm change is in the air: from the externally organised to the self-organised computer, of which the results described in this book may give an inkling.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:13155542009
spellingShingle Computing and Computers
Ramacher, Ulrich
von der Malsburg, Christoph
On the Construction of Artificial Brains
title On the Construction of Artificial Brains
title_full On the Construction of Artificial Brains
title_fullStr On the Construction of Artificial Brains
title_full_unstemmed On the Construction of Artificial Brains
title_short On the Construction of Artificial Brains
title_sort on the construction of artificial brains
topic Computing and Computers
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-00189-5
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1315554
work_keys_str_mv AT ramacherulrich ontheconstructionofartificialbrains
AT vondermalsburgchristoph ontheconstructionofartificialbrains