T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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572.1 | it sounds better | BUFFER::FUSCI | DEC has it (on backorder) NOW! | Mon Feb 01 1988 12:58 | 6 |
| "Positron" is another name for an anti-electron, a sub-atomic particle that
is in all ways similar to an electron except for its charge.
The term "electronic brain" doesn't have quite the same, er, charge to it.
Ray
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572.2 | Next week: Muonic brains | BAKHOE::KENAH | Quivering in sympathetic vibration... | Mon Feb 01 1988 13:21 | 14 |
| From an imaginary interview (contrived by the Good Doctor):
"What's a positronic brain?"
"A mechanism that uses positrons instead of electrons."
"How does it work?"
"I haven't the vaguest idea."
As stated in the preceding reply, "positronic" sounds better than
"electronic."
andrew
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572.3 | The Three Laws | RSTS32::WAJENBERG | Celebrated ozone dweller | Mon Feb 01 1988 13:55 | 31 |
| Asimov has admitted in several essays that he coined the term
"positronic brain" for the sheer sound of it. In his robot stories, he
has elaborated just a tiny bit more: positronic brains contain a good
deal of "platinum-iridium sponge."
The really important thing about Asimov's robot brains was that they
were of human calibre in most ways, but had a psychology dominated by
the "Three Laws of Robots" here quoted for those who haven't seen them
before:
First Law: A robot may not harm a human being or allow a human being to
com to harm.
Second Law: A robot must obey orders given it by human being unless
such obedience would violate the First Law.
Third Law: A robot must protect itself from harm unless such protection
would violate the First or Second Law.
The First Law has been adopted by many sf writers, particular for the
screen, under the name of the "Prime Directive."
Asimov tells a story that he went to a premier or preview (I forget) of
Kubrick's "2001," along with other spacey notables such Carl Sagan. At
the end of the first half, just before intermission, it is clear that
HAL 9000 is contemplating homicide. At intermission, Asimov came
steaming out into the lobby declaiming, "They're breaking the First
Law! They're breaking the First Law!" Quoth Sagan, "So why don't you
strike them down with lightning, Isaac?"
Earl Wajenberg
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572.4 | whatever -- they work in FoundationLand | INK::KALLIS | Just everybody please calm down... | Mon Feb 01 1988 15:57 | 9 |
| In the later stories, Isaac started dropping hints about how his
"brains" work, but they were tiny hints. Somehow, the p[ositrons
are routed to specific orbital paths that make the brains function.
"Disrupting" the pathways of these 'orbiting" positrons woulds
result in the "death" of a robot.
Oh, well ...
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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572.5 | | JLR::REDFORD | Facts don't do what you want them to | Mon Feb 01 1988 18:56 | 13 |
| If you want a good attack on the 'Laws' of Robotics, find "Roderick" by
John Sladek. Roderick is confused but maturing little robot who is trying
to make his way in the world. He doesn't understand how anyone could
consider these to be laws. For starters, how is a robot supposed to tell
what constitutes harm? Is it harmful to drink a beer? Probably, in some
sense. Is it harmful to cross the street? Could very likely be. If human
beings sometimes have trouble distinguishing these things, how are
robots supposed to? Asimov himself found a loophole in the laws in
almost every story. "Roderick" is a wonderful piece of satire in
general. Its sequel, "Roderick at Random", has just come out, and
is also good.
/jlr
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572.6 | the 3 laws are 4 | MLNTSC::CESANI | | Tue Feb 02 1988 02:25 | 4 |
| re .3
you forget the latest law of robotics,the 0th which he had to add
to make sense in his attempts to bring together the two main streams
of his writings
|
572.7 | Japan to build artificial brain by 2001 | MTWAIN::KLAES | No Guts, No Galaxy | Mon Aug 29 1994 14:27 | 49 |
| <><><><><><><><> T h e V O G O N N e w s S e r v i c e <><><><><><><><>
Edition : 3145 Monday 29-Aug-1994 Circulation : 5789
VNS COMPUTER NEWS ................................. 102 Lines
VNS TECHNOLOGY WATCH .............................. 25 "
For information on how to subscribe to VNS, ordering backissues, contacting
VNS staff members, etc, send a mail to EXPAT::EXPAT with a subject of HELP.
VNS TECHNOLOGY WATCH: [W. Stuart Crippen, VNS Correspondent]
===================== [Acton, MA, USA ]
A big silicon brain
-------------------
From Science News, July 30, 1994, Vol. 146, No. 5, Pg 77
Researchers at ATR laboratories in Kyoto, Japan, are building an
"artificial brain." To be completed in 2001, the lab's CAMBrain Project
aims to produce a silicon brain with more than 1 billion artificial
neurons, according to Hugo de Garis, an ATR computer scientist.
The brain will come in the form of a neural network and will exist
within a massively parallel computer. To create such a complex system,
the researchers will have the network build itself. "Cellular automata,"
each one a distinct computer program, will actually forge their own
linkages.
De Garis calls this approach "evolutionary engineering." The neural net
grows when cellular automata send "growth signals" to each other, then
connect via "synapses." Currently, the brain's logical innards are
forming in two dimensions, though they will soon begin to interconned in
three dimensions, de Garis says.
Since the network will evolve its own structure, de Garis calls it a
type of "Darwin Machine."
<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
For information on how to subscribe to VNS, ordering backissues, contacting
VNS staff members, etc, send a mail to EXPAT::EXPAT with a subject of HELP.
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<><><><><><><><> VNS Edition : 3145 Monday 29-Aug-1994 <><><><><><><><>
|
572.8 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Thu Sep 15 1994 14:52 | 8 |
| Wasn't there a theoritical number of nueron connections that onced
exceded self awareness would occur.
Brian V
I think therefore I am
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572.9 | 10X the brain in .7 . . . | NEMAIL::CARROLLJ | Even a clown knows when to strike | Thu Sep 15 1994 18:25 | 9 |
| re -.1
I think it was in the neighborhood of 10 billion or so ( taken from
the approx. # of connections in a human brain ). I read a story once
where the population of earth exceeded 10 billion, and human
civilization developed an intelligence - and promptly committed
suicide. Amusing, but scary thought . . .
- Jim
|