On Dec 3, 2007 11:03 PM, Bryan Bishop <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Monday 03 December 2007, Mike Dougherty wrote:
> Another method of doing search agents, in the mean time, might be to
> take neural tissue samples (or simple scanning of the brain) and try to
> simulate a patch of neurons via computers so that when the simulated
> neurons send good signals, the search agent knows that there has been a
> good match that excites the neurons, and then tells the wetware human
> what has been found. The problem that immediately comes to mind is that
> neurons for such searching are probably somewhere deep in the
> prefrontal cortex ... does anybody have any references to studies done
> with fMRI on people forming Google queries?

...and a few dozen brains from which we can extract the useful parts?  :)

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