On Saturday, September 07, 2019, at 10:21 AM, Alan Grimes wrote:
> Some examples of the limitations of the brain's architecture, include 
the inability to multiplex mental resources -> ie having a network of 
dozens of instances while retaining the advantages of having a single 
knowledge and skill pool. The lack of network features, etc...

Humans are designed for this, we are a multi-people intelligence and are 
tweaked for an inter-agent computational topology, for example, a tribe. A 
representation of the external topology exists in a sub-symbolic "model". This 
model IMO seems to be more of a switch/mux like a bidirectional filter who's 
structure is modulated by resource environment. If AGI is modeled after the 
human brain it should modeled after a system of brains communicating. But 
contemporary computational topology, for a example the cloud, provides a 
flattened  centralized fabric (even though the cloud is really distributed). So 
extracting the natural distributed computational structure of a system of 
brains and remodeling/projecting that into a cloud fabric allows for many 
optimizations. But, you just have to be careful about exuding features built 
into the other natural topology that are critical for general intelligence.

John
------------------------------------------
Artificial General Intelligence List: AGI
Permalink: 
https://agi.topicbox.com/groups/agi/Tf8343c16c309d228-M269003513d50d2ae0e2fc53a
Delivery options: https://agi.topicbox.com/groups/agi/subscription

Reply via email to