Fillard, Jean-Pierre

Brain vs computer : the challenge of the century Brain versus computer Jean-Pierre Fillard - New Jersey : World Scientific, c2017. - xxii, 240 p. : ill. ; 22 cm.

Part 1. About our brain: how does it work? --
The biological hardware (hard meat) --
The biological software (soft meat) -- Be aware of consciousness --
Transcendence. Part 2. Toward an intelligent computer --
The origin of the challenge --
Artificial intelligence --
Towards an intelligent computer. Part 3. How to make all that stuff hold together --
How to make Man and computer cooperate --
Copy the brain or search for a better solution? --
Is transhumanism a realistic future? --
Conclusion.

"It is well known that every animal species obeys Darwin's law of evolution, which requires permanent adaptation of animals to their environment. To be precise, every species except man, who behaves exactly contrariwise, adapting the workplace to himself in order to survive. For that he generally enjoys a particular gift of nature: intelligence. That reverse adaptation, which accumulated over centuries, led to what we call "progress". This was enhanced by the development of machines which began to be also intelligent and now compete fiercely with humans through the development of an "artificial intelligence". Some famous people in the world of science and technology recently sounded the alarm about the threats which these improvements are posing. They invoked a possible domination by the machines due to their uncontrolled superior intelligence, potentially leading us into a certain kind of slavery. In this book we take a look at this new challenge of the human brain versus the computer. The brain is a very complex organ and we are just beginning to understand how it works; many things remain mysterious and can lead to surprises. We will see how current investigations bring new information about this strange organ. We will also see how the "artificial challenger" plans to win the battle, how computers are getting more and more powerful and subtle as the AI advances. Would a transfer of minds in a machine be possible? Would the computer be capable of a self, nonneuromorphic intelligence? These questions are now open. Who will win? We do not know yet. But it is certain that many things are going to change in our lives in the very near future"--The publisher.

9789813145559 9789813145542

2016040762


Neuromorphics
Artificial intelligence
Human-computer interaction
Cognitive science

006.382 FI BR