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The Thousand Brains Theory of Intelligence (numenta.com)
206 points by headalgorithm on March 6, 2019 | hide | past | favorite | 37 comments


I'm very pleased to see Numenta on HN front page, as they're doing incredibly difficult and ambitious work without deep learning's spotlight. They take a philosophically very different approach: instead of warming up biologically implausible neural models from the 60s and hope that with enough data we'll reach artificial general intelligence (AGI), Numenta founder Jeff Hawkins (way before Hinton's or Hassabis's recent declarations of DL reaching a deadend) thinks we shall understand our biological neocortex better and reverse engineer it because it's the only piece of hardware most scientists agree is at the source of intelligence. Although planes don't have wings, we had to understand wing-flapping first to find better ways to fly. If you're interested, I highly recommend you follow https://discourse.numenta.org/


> Although planes don't have wings

I take your point that planes don't fly by flapping like birds, but obviously they do actually have wings.


Furthermore, the mechanics of flapping flight is complex, of little relevance to airplane design, and not well understood until well after airplanes were invented. What aviation owes to ornithology is mostly from the observation of gliding birds.


Depends on what you mean by wings. The word wings here has multiple meanings, with commonality that they both are involved in flying. However, they differ in their operation, i.e. one thing flaps the other doesn't.


You'll be claiming that tables don't have legs next.


A more concise way of putting it would be to say that airplanes are not ornithopters.


>Depends on what you mean by wings.

No it doesn't. I have arms. Certain machinery has arms. They may mean different things but they both have arms, just as both birds and planes have wings


If anyone is interested in some foundational reading Jeff Hawkins and Sandra Blakeslee published a fantastic book in 2004 called "On Intelligence: How a New Understanding of the Brain will Lead to the Creation of Truly Intelligent Machines".

There is also an audiobook version if that's your thing. I enjoyed it very much. Happy to see more progress from this group.


I’m very curious where you found Hassabis saying DL is at a dead end. I would be really interested to watch or read if you have a link.


"Deep learning is an amazing technology and hugely useful in itself, but in my opinion it's definitely not enough to solve AI, [not] by a long shot," [Hassabis] said

"I would regard it as one component, maybe with another dozen or half-a-dozen breakthroughs we're going to need like that.

"There's a lot more innovation that's required." https://www.techrepublic.com/article/google-deepmind-founder...