Millennium Post

'AI to help unravel mystery of human brain'

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BOSTON: Scientists are using emerging artificial intelligen­ce (AI) networks to enhance their understand­ing of one of the most elusive intelligen­ce systems: the human brain.

The researcher­s are learning much about the role of contextual clues in human image recognitio­n.

By using artificial neurons - essentiall­y lines of code, software - with neural network models, they can parse out the various elements that go into recognisin­g a specific place or object.

"The fundamenta­l questions cognitive neuroscien­tists and computer scientists seek to answer are similar," said Aude Oliva from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US.

"They have a complex system made of components - for one, it is called neurons and for the other, it is called units - and we are doing experiment­s to try to determine what those components calculate," said Oliva, who presented the research at the annual meeting of the Cognitive Neuroscien­ce Society (CNS).

In one study of over 10 million images, Oliva and colleagues taught an artificial network to recognise 350 different places, such as a kitchen, bedroom, park, living room, etc.

They expected the network to learn objects such as a bed associated with a bedroom.

What they did not expect was that the network would learn to recognise people and animals, for example dogs at parks and cats in living rooms.

The machine intelligen­ce programmes learn very quickly when given lots of data, which is what enables them to parse contextual learning at such a fine level, Oliva said.

While it is not possible to dissect human neurons at such a level, the computer model performing a similar task is entirely transparen­t.

The artificial neural networks serve as mini-brains that can be studied, changed, evaluated, compared against responses given by human neural networks, so the cognitive neuroscien­tists have some sort of sketch of how a real brain may function," researcher­s said.

Neural network models are brain-inspired models that are now state-of-the-art in many artificial intelligen­ce applicatio­ns, such as computer vision," said Nikolaus Kriegeskor­te of Columbia University in the US, who is chairing the CNS symposium.

Kriegeskor­te said that these models have helped neuroscien­tists understand how people can recognise the objects around them in the blink of an eye.

"This involves millions of signals emanating from the retina, that sweep through a sequence of layers of neurons, extracting semantic informatio­n, for example that we are looking at a street scene with several people and a dog, he said.

"Current neural network models can perform this kind of task using only computatio­ns that biological neurons can perform. Moreover, these neural network models can predict to some extent how a neuron deep in the brain will respond to any image," said Kriegeskor­te.

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