Longevity science
87
Live longer in good health and you will have a chance to extend your healthy life even further
Follow
Scooped by Ray and Terry's onto Longevity science
Scoop.it!

IBM supercomputer used to simulate a typical human brain

IBM supercomputer used to simulate a typical human brain | Longevity science | Scoop.it

The human brain, arguably the most complex object in the known universe, is a truly remarkable power-saver: it can simultaneously gather thousands of sensory inputs, interpret them in real time as a whole and react appropriately, abstracting, learning, planning and inventing, all on a strict power budget of about 20 W. A computer of comparable complexity that uses current technology, according to IBM's own estimates, would drain about 100 MW of power.

 

Clearly, such power consumption would be highly impractical. The problem, then, begs for an entirely new approach. IBM's answer is cognitive computing, a newly coined discipline that combines the latest discoveries in the field of neuroscience, nanotechnology and supercomputing.

 

Neuroscience has taught us that the brain consumes little power mainly because it is "event-driven." In simple terms this means that individual neurons, synapses and axons only consume power as they are activated – e.g. by an external sensory input or other neurons – and consume no power otherwise. This is however not the case with today's computers, which, in comparison, are huge power wasters.

No comment yet.
Discover Topics Ray and Terry's is following
Amazing Science Biomarkers and Personalized Medicine Singularity Scoops bioinformatics-databases Everything Infographic
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Ray and Terry's
Scoop.it!

Biotech Startup uBiome Aims To Sequence The Bacteria That Call Our Bodies Home

Biotech Startup uBiome Aims To Sequence The Bacteria That Call Our Bodies Home | Longevity science | Scoop.it
When you look at your body in the mirror, most of what you consider to be “you” actually isn’t you, at least not in a biological sense. That’s because there are approximately 10 bacterial cells for every single human cell in the body.
No comment yet.