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Student Maps Brain to Image Search

StonyandCher writes to mention that a University of Ottawa grad student is creating a search engine for visual images that will be powered by a system mapped from the human brain. "Woodbeck said he has already created a prototype of the search engine based on his patent, which apes the way the brain processes visual information and tries to take advantage of currently-available graphics processing capabilities in PCs. 'The brain is very parallel. There's lots of things going on at once,' he said. 'Graphics processors are also very parallel, so it's a case of almost mapping the brain onto graphics processors, getting them to process visual information more effectively.'"

4 of 72 comments (clear)

  1. Re:brain based search? by MarsDefenseMinister · · Score: 4, Funny

    Car keys are always in the last place you look, so we know that brain based searching is inefficient at best.

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  2. Problem: we don't KNOW how the brain does it by algorithmagic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I worked in visual brain research for years, and can vouch there are lots of skeletons in the closet, or elephants in the drawing room: there is no accepted model of the statistics of real images (corners, occlusion, shading), nor of the algorithms necessary to infer them from inputs, nor of the learning process to infer those algorithms. Yes the brain is parallel, and yes it involves robust, fuzzy processing and analog values, but we not only don't know how the brain does it, we don't even know what problem it's trying to solve. The good news is that if this student does indeed have a business model and a real-world problem people will pay to solve, then the ratchet of engineering evolution could give us some real traction into understanding and solving this mystery. Good luck!

  3. all hype? by snarkh · · Score: 4, Insightful


    Web search does not immediately reveal any details of his algorithm or any relevant papers, just media publicity. He does not even seem to have a web page.

  4. Re:brain based search? by zippthorne · · Score: 4, Funny

    You're making quite an assumption, there. They might be in the last place you look, but I make sure to keep looking after I find 'em every so often, just to avoid that awful cliché.

    The best part is, you can put "finding the keys" in any percentile you want, just by looking some more. Heck, you can really screw with the average by looking for 'em occasionally when you already know where they are.

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