The 100-step constraint
Alogrithms modelling cognitive processes must meet the 100-step constraint for performing complex tasks imposed by the brain's timescale. Classical sequential algorithms, which run in millions of time-steps now, seem unlikely to meet the constraint.
Jerome Feldman (1985).

Immediately related elementsHow this works
-
Artificial Intelligence »Artificial Intelligence
Can computers think? [1] »Can computers think? [1]
Yes: physical symbol systems can think [3] »Yes: physical symbol systems can think [3]
The Biological Assumption »The Biological Assumption
Brain has a von Neumann architecture »Brain has a von Neumann architecture
The brain processes information in parallel »The brain processes information in parallel
The 100-step constraint
100-step contraint is directed at implementation level »100-step contraint is directed at implementation level
Jerry Fodor »Jerry Fodor
Zenon Pylyshyn »Zenon Pylyshyn
+Komentarai (0)
+Citavimą (0)
+About