WASHINGTON. U.S. computer giant IBM Corp. announced Thursday that computer chips have a prototype of how the human brain works to emulate developed.
Armonk company, based in New York known as “Big Blue”, said the pilots’ cognitive computing chip “engine that could lead to” emulate the brain’s ability to perception, action and cognition.
“The chip is an important step in the evolution of computers from calculators to the learning system, which marks the beginning of a new generation of computers,” said Dharmendra Modha, project manager for IBM Research.
“Future applications will increasingly demand computing features that are not efficiently delivered to the traditional architecture.”
IBM said the computer, cognitive, such as the human brain, he would “learn through experience, found a correlation, making hypotheses, and remember – and learn from the -.”
Roger Kay of Endpoint Technologies Associates, said IBM’s “brain architecture and said:” We can in some electronic way to mimic what we know about the brain, how the brain works “.
“Not to the point where they do practical work, but they have shown that the concept,” he said. “This is a new frontier.”
According to IBM, artificial intelligence research, led by the year 1956, is leading to a computer chip capable of complex, real-time data from multiple sensors and take into action.
(continue reading…)




