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  1. Aug 29, 2022 · New study adds an important piece to the puzzle of human brain evolution, explaining why humans are more cognitively advanced than other animals. Scientists are a step closer to understanding the question of how information is processed in the human brain that has long intrigued scientists.

  2. May 9, 2022 · Since then, the comparative view between brains and computers has been developed in new, sometimes unexpected directions. With the rise of deep learning and the development of connectomics, an evolutionary look at how both hardware and neural complexity have evolved or designed is required.

    • Ricard Solé, Luís F. Seoane
    • Entropy (Basel). 2022 May; 24(5): 665.
    • 10.3390/e24050665
    • 2022/05
  3. Dec 21, 2022 · MIT researchers are discovering which parts of the brain are engaged when a person evaluates a computer program. Researchers found that the brain's multiple demand and language systems — which are responsible for very different cognitive tasks — encode specific code properties and uniquely align with machine-learned representations of code ...

  4. Jan 3, 2024 · Researchers from the MRC Brain Network Dynamics Unit and Oxford University’s Department of Computer Science have set out a new principle to explain how the brain adjusts connections between neurons during learning.

  5. The impact of digital technology use, both negative and positive, on these and many more brain-related phenomena has been elaborated in the review by Korte, who provides a comprehensive overview of the field.

    • Margret R Hoehe, Florence Thibaut
    • 2020
  6. Apr 28, 2022 · Perhaps the brain-computer is “programmed by evolution” or “self-programmed,” but these are rather vague metaphorical uses. To give some substance to the statement “the brain is a computer,” one needs to identify programs in the brain, and a way in which these programs can be changed arbitrarily.

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  8. Jul 18, 2022 · The human brain is one of the most intricate systems in nature. Recreating its behaviour using computer programs is no easy task, but it can be done – by using artificial intelligence hardware that mimics the deeply complex networks of neuron cells in our brains.