Sand in the Brain: A Fundamental Theory To Model the Mind
An anonymous reader writes "In 1999, the Danish physicist Per Bak proclaimed to a group of neuroscientists that it had taken him only 10 minutes to determine where the field had gone wrong. Perhaps the brain was less complicated than they thought, he said. Perhaps, he said, the brain worked on the same fundamental principles as a simple sand pile, in which avalanches of various sizes help keep the entire system stable overall — a process he dubbed 'self-organized criticality.'"
Dear fellow scientists, admire us for the 1% of the cases when things like "oh i have a very simple theory about this" are brilliant and dont hate us for the 99% of the cases where this is just idiotic and arrogant.
http://xkcd.com/793/
The really interesting thing will be when Randall does a comic about how you can get easy upvotes for "oblig xkcd" posts.
alright just kidding, but seriously...if our brains really are just jumbled masses of impulses...
Then jumbled masses of impulses must be pretty darn good.
The objective reality is that this process has been observed to happen in the brain. Repeatedly; consensually; experientially.
The open question, at least for me, is, is there any reason to think that this is the only, or even the primary, mode of neural operation?
Sand will indeed avalanche following the power law when it's poured on top of itself. But it does something completely different when it is suspended in turbulent water, or melted into glass, or just sitting there on the beach (seems to have an affinity for the inside of bathing suits as I recall, though it's been a while.)
Perhaps avalanche at criticality is "the" answer. But I think we're quite some distance from declaring that particular win. I'm all for the exploration, though.
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
http://www.smbc-comics.com/?id=2556
The most accurate single-compartment model for how a single neuron operates is based on circuit theory and was formulated by two British biophysicists in the 1950s.
I prefer the "Dust in the Wind" model.
I even Read The Fine Article but I still get the sense there is supposed to more to this than just the self-evident "if a system reaches a state of instability it stops being stable".
"Sand in the clowns"
Table-ized A.I.
I'm confused here. I know some people that seem to have rocks in their heads -- is that the same thing?
If the universe is someone's simulation -- does that mean the stars are just stuck pixels?
Intelligent idiots are we. | Evil men do not understand justice.
What's with the "cloudflare" website middleman stuff? Kind of feels like someone's breaking net neutrality. I can't read the link unless I go through a middleman SSL & whatnot?
Can We stop conflating the brain with the Mind, please? The Mind is a philosophical concept and the brain is a physical organ. The two ideas are distinctly different and their conflation speaks of gross ignorance.
Depends on what you usually use for thinking.
bickerdyke
But any time a scientist (particularly a theoretical physicist; they're especially prone to that) claims, within minutes, to revolutionize a different field of science in which everybody has apparently been wrong for decades, this should be taken sceptically. Obligatory xkcd: https://xkcd.com/675/
Knuth is still alive. Planck, Shannon, Newton and Feynman are examples of exemplars who lived full long lives.. these are just the ones that come to mind. I'm sure there are many more.
Shannon died after a long bout with alzheimers. That brilliant mind had died long before its body.
"Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.
I think you just had a brain sand avalanche.
Claiming self-organized criticality explains the mind, as TFA does, is akin to claiming that a model of how clock synchronization works in a microprocessor explains the algorithms it implements. This is literally the dumbest thing I've seen posted on Slashdot in a long while. If you really want to know how the mind works, read the work of leading neuroscientists like Damasio (Self Comes to Mind is a good start, then just follow up on the extensive bilbiography therein).
"Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."
The limitation on serial computation is not really in the architecture, it's in the code. If the compiler were to generate multi-threaded code where serial dependencies were minimized, (and if coders learned to use this feature), then it would be fairly easy to uncouple the various cars on the computer train and let them each follow their own tracks until some intermediate output was exchanged.
A lot of new VLSI architecture is capable of this kind of uncoupling. Even with the same clock rates.
physicist, many, many times make statements about other disciplines and been wrong every time.
Why? becasue they don't hold themselves to the same level of rigor in other fields as they would in there own..
Sure, maybe he is correct, but not likely. So.. write a scientific paper held to a high level of rigor.
If you can do that, then I don't care what you expertise is in. Hell, you could be a ditch digger, but if you write a paper that stands up to peer review, then you history should not matter.
Unless you history includes fraudulent papers.
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discipline. It's not like there is a physicist factory where everyone just pound out physics. So disciplines are less abstract the others.
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" nature is made up by random events"
no. It's made up of complex events interacting and may seem random only because we don't understand everything. The more properties you understand, then the less random it becomes.
I am talking about the macro world, natch.
"So perhaps the brain works like this to. It's a collection of chaos, bound by rules. Those rules cause the microscopic chaos to form patterns on the macro scale.
You might as well of said the brain works like things in nature work. well. no duh.
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