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    IBM pursues chips that behave like brains

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Computers, like humans, can learn. But when Google tries to fill in your search box based only on a few keystrokes, or your iPhone predicts words as you type a text message, it's only a narrow mimicry of what the human brain is capable.

    The challenge in training a computer to behave like a human brain is technological and physiological, testing the limits of computer and brain science. But researchers from IBM Corp. say they've made a key step toward combining the two worlds.

    The company announced Thursday that it has built two prototype chips that it says process data more like how humans digest information than the chips that now power PCs and supercomputers.

    The chips represent a significant milestone in a six-year-long project that has involved 100 researchers and some $41 million in funding from the government's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA. That's the Pentagon arm that focuses on long-term research and previously brought the world the Internet. IBM has also committed an undisclosed amount of money.

    The prototypes offer further evidence of the growing importance of "parallel processing," or computers doing multiple tasks simultaneously. That is important for rendering graphics and crunching large amounts of data.

    The uses of the IBM chips so far are prosaic, such as steering a simulated car through a maze, or playing Pong. It may be a decade or longer before the chips make their way out of the lab and into actual products.

    But what's important is not what the chips are doing, but how they're doing it, says Giulio Tononi, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin at Madison who worked with IBM on the project.

    The chips' ability to adapt to types of information that it wasn't specifically programmed to expect is a key feature.

    "There's a lot of work to do still, but the most important thing is usually the first step," Tononi said in an interview. "And this is not one step, it's a few steps."

    Technologists have long imagined computers that learn like humans. Your iPhone or Google's servers can be programmed to predict certain behavior based on past events. But the techniques being explored by IBM and other companies and university research labs around "cognitive computing" could lead to chips that are better able to adapt to unexpected information.

    IBM's interest in the chips lies in their ability to potentially help process real-world signals such as temperature or sound or motion and make sense of them for computers.

    IBM, which is based in Armonk, N.Y., is a leader in a movement to link physical infrastructure, such as power plants or traffic lights, and information technology, such as servers and software that help regulate their functions. Such projects can be made more efficient with tools to monitor the myriad analog signals present in those environments.

    Dharmendra Modha, project leader for IBM Research, said the new chips have parts that behave like digital "neurons" and "synapses" that make them different than other chips. Each "core," or processing engine, has computing, communication and memory functions.

    "You have to throw out virtually everything we know about how these chips are designed," he said. "The key, key, key difference really is the memory and the processor are very closely brought together. There's a massive, massive amount of parallelism."

    The project is part of the same research that led to IBM's announcement in 2009 that it had simulated a cat's cerebral cortex, the thinking part of the brain, using a massive supercomputer. Using progressively bigger supercomputers, IBM had previously simulated 40 percent of a mouse's brain in 2006, a rat's full brain in 2007, and 1 percent of a human's cerebral cortex in 2009.

    A computer with the power of the human brain is not yet near. But Modha said the latest development is an important step.

    "It really changes the perspective from 'What if?' to 'What now?'" Modha said. "Today we proved it was possible. There have been many skeptics, and there will be more, but this completes in a certain sense our first round of innovation."

     

    67 comments

    • Eleanor Mothersbaugh  •  9 mths ago
      If the chip can do what it says i can't help but think if this is place on a brain dead person ... will he come alive ?
      If use in our brains will it make us think faster and solve complex equation and sums ? hmmm.... So we just download program to our "brain" ?
      Like download Law and get law qualification ?
      Haha... :P
      Note: Meaning the chip is place in a computer with probe sticking in the nerve of the brain
    • Gregory Whitfield  •  9 mths ago
      new age technology old world emotions... sounds like chaos to me .Going to clean my guns and stock pile ammunition and non perishables.and get rid of this computer.lol.
    • SamiMc  •  9 mths ago
      "It really changes the perspective from 'What if?' to 'What now?'" hmmm.......
    • r. a  •  9 mths ago
      In the days of the Nazi's we called these people mad scientists.The air is poisoned,the food is genetically modified and ruined,they put corexit which is poison in the water after they ruin the gulf of mexico with oil,Japan is hopelessly radioactive and they shoot depleted uranium around the middleast like it's nothin'.They invented electrical whip tasers for the slaves,have the police and military dressed like teen age mutant turtles to beat the people up when they protest being savagely looted.The wars are against civilians and the armies don't even protect the people but attack unarmed people.They have camera's all over the streets and invent unmanned drones to kill people without warning...The world has a case of criminally insane building criminally insane horrors for the criminally insane who show us dum dum's on their TV stations and tell us these are REALLY the global leaders.IBM numbered the jews for the Nazi death camps.These people are insane,but what's worse is the people here that just accept all this as normal,and progress.LOL
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      Sounds great if we're not all deformed and dead from RADIATION.
    • D  •  9 mths ago
      It might as well behave like a brain because the more we rely on technology to think for us, the dumber we become.
    • Lye  •  9 mths ago
      In Soviet Russia, program writes YOU!
    • James  •  9 mths ago
      behave like a brain but most of us are brain dead
    • Just One  •  9 mths ago
      I'll B Back!
    • Thomas  •  9 mths ago
      And more on-topic, the metaphor for computing is basically a logic gate which facilitates Boolean Logic (if, then, else...and/or/not). The human brain seems to work with a far different, and here-to-fore completely different metaphor. I've seen no "machine" similar to the Turing vision.
    • Thomas  •  9 mths ago
      To the author: poor grammar: "it's only a narrow mimicry of what the human brain is capable." might be better written: "it's only a narrow mimicry of the human brain's true capabilities." This is just one suggestion...better ones exist that don't use the precise wording provided. Another might be "Conn and Stumpf, The Elements of Style" and this is required reading for anyone aspiring to write (a small, concise style guide that was written long ago by a frustrated writer who wanted to nail grammar down quickly. It can be read in a day at most and it is a great reference.)
      • Thomas 9 mths ago
        Correction: authors of "The Elements of Style" are "Strunk and White," not "Conn and Sumpf." (the latter authored my Biochemistry book circa 1977...old man's memory disease...)
    • J.D  •  9 mths ago
      PUT IN OBUMBMER HEAD,CHANGE?
    • zz  •  9 mths ago
      We bring the ethereal to life. We give math "legs". In a sense, we're forcing it "to be". We are the inquisitors of Da Vinci. "Do you confess?!" "How do your weapons work?" "What are your secrets?" Only black hole sun awaits. Event Horizon. Chaos.
    • Joe Blo  •  9 mths ago
      This is pathetic. About once every 10 or 20 years, someone comes up with the "novel" idea of simulating mammalian brains with computer hardware or software. And they get a bunch of research funding for it, which they burn through with no positive result. Unfortunately, neuroscience has not even come up with a primitive understanding of how neurons function together in networks to accomplish simple tasks, let alone thought and cognition. Nothing. The people who invented the architecture of the computers we use today worked from the ideas of philosophers, who in the 1800's, laid out the first concepts of how logic gates (AND, OR, NOT, etc.) can be joined together to form logic circuits. Scientists in the 1930's and 1940's took those ideas and used logic circuits to construct state machines. From state machines, they constructed CPU's. From individual CPU's, they constructed present-day multi-CPU microprocessors. Nobody looked at a sophisticated computer and tried to work backwards to figure out how it works at the simplest level. Synthesis is almost always more productive than reduction. I'm not going to hold my breath waiting for these guys at IBM and DARPA to produce "chips that behave like brains". They should quit wasting taxpayer money. How about something productive . . . like a ray gun that eliminates "conservatives".
    • toadster  •  9 mths ago
      I prefer to control the machines than have the machines control us. A thinking machine has no need for humans with all our fault and emotions.
    • sunshine  •  9 mths ago
      Great. I am moving into the network. Things are nicer as a program.

      "There is freedom within...there is freedom without."
      -Don't Dream It's Over covered by Sixpence None The Richer
    • JAMES  •  9 mths ago
      HAL 100 Is BORN!
    • Randolph  •  9 mths ago
      "1 percent of a human's cerebral cortex in 2009."
      So, according to Moore's Law, it won't be that much longer before it's smarter than people.
    • Reality Check  •  9 mths ago
      If it acts like Obama the computer will be spending money you do not have or will it think it is entitled and want a check every month..
      • Chris 9 mths ago
        You Repuglicans just never quit do you? So obsessed with you hate and anger that someone might get something that you don't think they deserve. This article is about something really cool - quit turning everything into political bickering.
    • F  •  9 mths ago
      Computers that learn like humans and eventually become self-aware and act like human....

      One Word:

      Terminator :)
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