This
notion formed the basis for the Global Future 2045 International
Congress, a futuristic conference held in New York, last week.
The
conference, which is the brainchild of Russian multimillionaire Dmitry
Itskov, featured Ray Kurzweil - an inventor, futurist and now director
of engineering at Google - who predicted that by 2045, technology will
have surpassed human brainpower to create a kind of superintelligence an
event known as the singularity.
Other scientists have said that robots will overtake humans by 2100, 'LiveScience' reported.
According
to Moore's law, computing power doubles approximately every two years.
Several technologies are undergoing similar exponential advances,
genetic sequencing to 3D printing, Kurzweil told conference attendees.
By
2045, "based on conservative estimates of the amount of computation you
need to functionally simulate a human brain, we'll be able to expand
the scope of our intelligence a billion-fold," Kurzweil said.
Substantial
achievements have already been made in the field of brain-computer
interfaces, or BCIs (also called brain-machine interfaces).
Jose
Carmena and Michel Maharbiz, electrical engineers at the University of
California, Berkeley, are working to develop state-of-the-art motor
BCIs.
These devices consist of pill-size
electrode arrays that record neural signals the brain's motor areas,
which are then decoded by a computer and used to control a computer
cursor or prosthetic limb (such as a robotic arm).
Theodore
Berger, a neural engineer at the University of Southern California in
Los Angeles, is taking BCIs to a new level by developing a memory
prosthesis. Berger aims to replace part of the brain's hippocampus, the
region that converts short-term memories into long-term ones, with a
BCI.
The device records the electrical activity
that encodes a simple short-term memory (such as pushing a button) and
converts it to a digital signal. That signal is passed into a computerit
is mathematically transformed and then fed back into the brain,it gets
sealed in as a long-term memory.
Martine
Rothblatt - a lawyer, author and entrepreneur, and CEO of biotech
company United Therapeutics Corp introduced the concept of "mindclones" -
digital versions of humans that can live forever - in the conference.
She
described how the mind clones are created a "mindfile," a sort of
online repository of our personalities, which she argued humans already
have (in the form of Facebook, for example). This mindfile would be run
on 'mindware', a kind of software for consciousness.
No comments:
Post a Comment