I've been slowly reading this book on cognition and neuroscience, "A Thousand Brains: A New Theory of Intelligence" by Jeff Hawkins.
The answer is: Yes, yes we are basically fancy auto-complete machines.
Basically, our brains are composed of lots and lots of columns of neurons that are very good at predicting the next thing based on certain inputs.
What's really interesting is what happens when the next thing is NOT what you expect. I'm putting this in a very simplistic way (because I don't understand it myself), but, basically: Your brain goes crazy when you...
- Think you're drinking coffee but suddenly taste orange juice
- Move your hand across a coffee cup and suddenly feel fur
- Anticipate your partner's smile but see a frown
These differences between what we predict will happen and what actually happens cause a ton of activity in our brains. We'll notice it, and act on it, and try to get our brain back on the path of smooth sailing, where our predictions match reality again.
The last part of the book talks about implications for AI which I haven't got to yet.
The answer is: Yes, yes we are basically fancy auto-complete machines.
Basically, our brains are composed of lots and lots of columns of neurons that are very good at predicting the next thing based on certain inputs.
What's really interesting is what happens when the next thing is NOT what you expect. I'm putting this in a very simplistic way (because I don't understand it myself), but, basically: Your brain goes crazy when you...
- Think you're drinking coffee but suddenly taste orange juice
- Move your hand across a coffee cup and suddenly feel fur
- Anticipate your partner's smile but see a frown
These differences between what we predict will happen and what actually happens cause a ton of activity in our brains. We'll notice it, and act on it, and try to get our brain back on the path of smooth sailing, where our predictions match reality again.
The last part of the book talks about implications for AI which I haven't got to yet.