How our brain are responding the problems
bangchoy.com Suppose that the room is dark so that you can not see the cigarettes. You know, or hope, there is a pack of cigarettes on the table, together with other objects. Instinctively, your hand “Attack” back and forth, running zig-zag movements (or “scanning”) rejecting an object after another, while cigarettes were found and recognized “. This is an example of the latter type of support mechanism. A name temporarily forgotten, is another example.
“Scanner” in our brain scans back through our memories which stored until the correct name is “recognized.” Electronic brain solves problems in much the same way. First, much of the data are inserted into the machine. This information recorded or stored, in memory of the machine. One problem is put on the machine. Scanning back through memory, while the only “solution”, which is consistent and meets all the conditions of space problem. Problem and answer together form a position of “objectives” or structure. As part of the state or structure (problem) is given to the machine, it detects only the “missing pieces” of the correct size brick, so to speak, to complete the structure.
The more that is learned about the human brain, the better it seems – to work – a servo-mechanism. For example, Dr. Wilder Penfield, director of the Montreal Neurological Institute, recently told a meeting of the National Academy of Sciences, is a mechanism for recording in a small area of the brain, apparently faithful discovered that records everything a person ever experiences, observed or experienced . During brain surgery, the patient is fully awake, Dr. Penfield done with a small area of skin contact with surgical instruments. Immediately, the patient said she is “precious moments” incident from his childhood that was deliberately ignored. Further experiments in this direction gives similar results.
If some areas of the cortex are affected, not only for patients “remember” past experience that the ‘light’ experience as a very real all the images, sounds and sensations of the original experience. It was as if past experiences are recorded on a tape recorder and play. Just as small as a mechanism of the human brain can store so much information is still a mystery.
British neurophysicist W. Walter Gray said that at least ten billions of cells will be necessary for an electronic facsimile of the human brain to build. These cells would occupy about one and ???????? million cubic meters and a few extra million cubic meters will be necessary for nerve “cables. Power required for the job would be one billion watts.






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