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Jan 13, 2024

The Attention Schema Theory: A Foundation for Engineering Artificial Consciousness

Posted by in categories: biological, neuroscience, robotics/AI

The purpose of the attention schema theory is to explain how an information-processing device, the brain, arrives at the claim that it possesses a non-physical, subjective awareness and assigns a high degree of certainty to that extraordinary claim. The theory does not address how the brain might actually possess a non-physical essence. It is not a theory that deals in the non-physical. It is about the computations that cause a machine to make a claim and to assign a high degree of certainty to the claim. The theory is offered as a possible starting point for building artificial consciousness. Given current technology, it should be possible to build a machine that contains a rich internal model of what consciousness is, attributes that property of consciousness to itself and to the people it interacts with, and uses that attribution to make predictions about human behavior. Such a machine would “believe” it is conscious and act like it is conscious, in the same sense that the human machine believes and acts.

This article is part of a special issue on consciousness in humanoid robots. The purpose of this article is to summarize the attention schema theory (AST) of consciousness for those in the engineering or artificial intelligence community who may not have encountered previous papers on the topic, which tended to be in psychology and neuroscience journals. The central claim of this article is that AST is mechanistic, demystifies consciousness and can potentially provide a foundation on which artificial consciousness could be engineered. The theory has been summarized in detail in other articles (e.g., Graziano and Kastner, 2011; Webb and Graziano, 2015) and has been described in depth in a book (Graziano, 2013). The goal here is to briefly introduce the theory to a potentially new audience and to emphasize its possible use for engineering artificial consciousness.

The AST was developed beginning in 2010, drawing on basic research in neuroscience, psychology, and especially on how the brain constructs models of the self (Graziano, 2010, 2013; Graziano and Kastner, 2011; Webb and Graziano, 2015). The main goal of this theory is to explain how the brain, a biological information processor, arrives at the claim that it possesses a non-physical, subjective awareness and assigns a high degree of certainty to that extraordinary claim. The theory does not address how the brain might actually possess a non-physical essence. It is not a theory that deals in the non-physical. It is about the computations that cause a machine to make a claim and to assign a high degree of certainty to the claim. The theory is in the realm of science and engineering.

Jan 13, 2024

Towards a mathematical model of the brain — Lai-Sang Young

Posted by in categories: mathematics, neuroscience

Members’ SeminarTopic: Towards a mathematical model of the brainSpeaker: Lai-Sang YoungAffiliation: New York University; Distinguished Visiting Professor, Sc…

Jan 13, 2024

Solar-powered airship will circle the world non-stop without fuel

Posted by in categories: finance, solar power, sustainability, transportation

Zero-emissions long-distance aviation is absolutely possible… Provided you’re not in a hurry. Solar Airship One will take 20 days to fly all the way around the equator, some 40,000 km (~25,000 miles), in a single zero-emissions hop.

The 151-m (495-ft)-long airship will have its entire upper surface covered in solar film – some 4,800 square meters (51,700 sq ft) of it, or about nine-tenths of an NFL football field for those of you who prefer the standard units.

Continue reading “Solar-powered airship will circle the world non-stop without fuel” »

Jan 13, 2024

Why does depression cause difficulties with learning?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, mathematics, neuroscience

When learning, patients with schizophrenia or depression have difficulty making optimal use of information that is new to them. In the learning process, both groups of patients give greater weight to less important information and, as a result, make less than ideal decisions.

This was the finding of a several-months-long study conducted by a team led by neuroscientist Professor Dr. med. Markus Ullsperger from the Institute of Psychology at Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg in collaboration with colleagues from the University Clinic for Psychiatry & Psychotherapy and the German Center for Mental Health.

By using electroencephalography (EEG) and complex mathematical computer modeling, the team of researchers discovered that learning deficits in depressive and schizophrenic are caused by diminished/reduced flexibility in the use of new information.

Jan 13, 2024

To avoid the worst effects of aging, we might need to exercise harder than we thought

Posted by in category: life extension

Those hoping to avoid one of the worst side effects of aging—bone, joint and muscle pain that doesn’t go away—might need to exercise a lot harder and more often than previously believed.

According to a new study, only high levels of activity at least once a week—playing tennis, running, swimming, digging with a spade, or doing hard physical labor as part of your job—appears to help ward off chronic musculoskeletal pain in the long-term.

The study, led by Dr. Nils Niederstrasser at the University of Portsmouth, examined the data of 5,802 people aged 50 or more over ten years.

Jan 13, 2024

Serotonin plays a key role in patience and impulse control, research says

Posted by in category: neuroscience

There is a neurological link between serotonin levels and the brain’s ability to control impulses and patience levels.

Jan 13, 2024

First unhackable shopping transactions carried out on quantum internet

Posted by in categories: computing, internet, quantum physics

A secure exchange between a merchant and a buyer has been successfully tested as a proof of concept using a small quantum computing network in China.

By Karmela Padavic-Callaghan

Jan 13, 2024

Papular–Purpuric “Gloves and Socks” Syndrome in Parvovirus B19 Infection

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

A 26-year-old man with a 1-week history of a rash on his hands and feet and fever had scattered, partially blanchable macules that had merged into erythematous patches on his hands and feet. Read the full clinical case from มหาวิทยาลัยเชียงใหม่ Chiang Mai University:


Images in Clinical Medicine from The New England Journal of Medicine — Papular–Purpuric “Gloves and Socks” Syndrome in Parvovirus B19 Infection.

Jan 12, 2024

Solar paint’ technology could be cheaper alternative to panels: ‘Billions of light-sensitive particles [are] mixed in

Posted by in categories: particle physics, solar power, sustainability

Solar panels are already an affordable energy solution since they generate enough power over their lifetimes to pay for themselves and then some. However, they do take some investment up front, and some people (and homeowners associations) dislike the way they look.

So what if you could get that power to make electricity from sunlight without having to install solar panels? That’s the beauty of solar paint, as reported by Solar Action Alliance.

The idea behind solar paint (aka photovoltaic paint) is simple: It’d be like ordinary paint but with billions of light-sensitive particles mixed in, as Understand Solar notes.

Jan 12, 2024

Ask Ethan: Why doesn’t radiation dominate the Universe?

Posted by in categories: energy, space

For every proton, there were over a billion others that annihilated away with an antimatter counterpart. So where did all that energy go?