Paul’s blog – dedicated to my friends

Emboddied intelligence – maybe cognition is not so much related to inference

Posted in cognitive science, philosophy, psychology by Paul Sabou on January 30, 2008

This is something that Michael Polanyi would have loved to hear (think of his example with the blind man’s cane) :

“Don’t take that hammer for granted. Using tools may seem like second nature, but only a few animals can master the coordination and mental sophistication required. So how did primates learn to use tools in the first place? A new study in monkeys suggests that the brain’s trick is to treat tools as just another body part.” (see here)

Mouse brain simulated on computer

Posted in cognitive science by Paul Sabou on April 27, 2007

US researchers have simulated half a virtual mouse brain on a supercomputer.

The scientists ran a “cortical simulator” that was as big and as complex as half of a mouse brain on the BlueGene L supercomputer.

See a more comprehensive article here.

mirroring neurons : the next revolution?

Posted in articles, cognitive science by Paul Sabou on January 22, 2007

See MIRROR NEURONS AND THE BRAIN IN THE VAT by V.S. Ramachandran. It’s a proposal for a rational explanation of the dissolution of them self/them distinction.

Researchers at UCLA [1] found that cells in the human anterior cingulate, which normally fire when you poke the patient with a needle (“pain neurons”), will also fire when the patient watches another patient being poked. The mirror neurons, it would seem, dissolve the barrier between self and others. I call them “empathy neurons” or “Dalai Llama neurons”. (I wonder how the mirror neurons of a masochist or sadist will respond to another person being poked.) Dissolving the “self vs. other” barrier is the basis of many ethical systems, especially eastern philosophical and mystical traditions. This research implies that mirror neurons can be used to provide rational rather than religious grounds for ethics (although we must be careful not to commit the is/ought fallacy).

mirroring neurons : the next revolution?

Posted in cognitive science by Paul Sabou on January 10, 2007

See MIRROR NEURONS AND THE BRAIN IN THE VAT by V.S. Ramachandran. It’s a proposal for a rational explanation of the dissolution of them self/them distinction.

Researchers at UCLA [1] found that cells in the human anterior cingulate, which normally fire when you poke the patient with a needle (“pain neurons”), will also fire when the patient watches another patient being poked. The mirror neurons, it would seem, dissolve the barrier between self and others. I call them “empathy neurons” or “Dalai Llama neurons”. (I wonder how the mirror neurons of a masochist or sadist will respond to another person being poked.) Dissolving the “self vs. other” barrier is the basis of many ethical systems, especially eastern philosophical and mystical traditions. This research implies that mirror neurons can be used to provide rational rather than religious grounds for ethics (although we must be careful not to commit the is/ought fallacy).

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