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by tonymillion
1006 days ago
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This kind of question is meaningless, and I’m pretty sure it comes from the old view of neurons being somewhat akin to a 1-1 or many-1 digital switch (it isn’t). In fact, we currently don’t even know the full extent of the types of neurons in the brain or the way they function and interact [1] There are neurons that only fire when a certain percentage of their inputs are stimulated, some that have a temporal component to their firing and more. In all the computer neural net research I read I never saw an implementation that truly explored or implemented more than a few types (like 3-4) of neuronal input and only one type of output [1] https://qbi.uq.edu.au/brain/brain-anatomy/types-neurons |
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