So if we assume 10 Hz in the brain and 4GHz on silicon, we need to do
25000 neuron-equivalent operations per cycle on silicon.

On 1/24/07, terry mcintyre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Moravec estimates that the computer which beat a grandmaster
was equivalent to 1/30 of the processing capacity of a human brain.
So, let's call it 10^13 neurons -- a fraction of the brain, but still a
very large amount of processing capability.


----- Original Message ----
From: David Doshay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

At the 3rd International Conference on Baduk there was a paper
presented on fMRI images of the brains of expert and non-expert
players analyzing Go problems. The conclusion of the research
is that experts use far less of their brains than non-experts. The
volume of the brain used by experts is quite small.

On 24, Jan 2007, at 9:17 AM, terry mcintyre wrote:

> does this approach what a Meijin does with a large fraction
> of 10^15 neurons all working in tandem?

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