Friday, August 20, 2010

Logic gates using toys

mlittman | September 13, 2007

A demonstration of dominoes and legos acting as logic gates. Created for CS105 at Rutgers University by Michael Littman.

Category:

Howto & Style


The Intelligence of the Unconscious - University of California San Diego



Partner:
University of California San Diego
Location:
University of California San Diego
La Jolla, CA
Event Date:
02.08.08
Speakers:
Gerd Gigerenzer
Summary
Gut Feelings: The Intelligence of the Unconscious

Acccording to the speaker, human beings tend to think of intelligence as a deliberate, conscious activity guided by the laws of logic. Yet, he argues, much of our mental life is unconscious, based on processes alien to logic: gut feelings, or intuitions. Dr. Gigerenzer argues that intuition is more than impulse and caprice; it has its own rationale. This can be described by fast and frugal heuristics, which exploit evolved abilities in the human brain. Heuristics ignore information and try to focus on the few important reasons. Says Gigerenzer: "More information, more time, even more thinking, are not always better, and less can be more." His talk is part of an ongoing series on "Behavioral, Social and Computational Sciences Seminars" organized by the UC San Diego division of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2), which aims to bring the benefits of computational science to disciplines that have largely been by-passed by the information-technology revolution until now. More information on this and other talks in the series can be found at http://bscs3.calit2.net. Gigerenzer, a leading expert and author on heuristics, won the AAAS Prize for the best article in the behavioral sciences. He is the author of Calculated Risks: How To Know When Numbers Deceive You, the German translation of which won the Scientific Book of the Year Prize in 2002. His books on heuristics include Bounded Rationality: The Adaptive Toolbox, with Reinhard Selten, a Nobel laureate in economics - UCSD

The Origin of the Human Mind: Brain Imaging and Evolution

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Lecture - 1 Representations of Dynamical Systems

Lecture - 14 Introduction to Fractals

Part 2 of 2 MonoAtomic Gold-- FOOD for the GODS?

Part 1 of 2 MonoAtomic Gold-- FOOD for the GODS?

White Powder Gold - Monoatomic Gold - Zeropoint Technologies Lab preview

The Eyes Have It: Modern Medicine of Vision, Part 2

The Eyes Have It: Modern Medicine of Vision, Part 1

Exploration of the History of Science and Technology

Stem Cells & Tissue Regeneration

Mind-Body Interactions

Love, Belief, and Neurobiology of Attachment

Transform Your Mind, Change Your Brain

Change your Mind Change your Brain: The Inner Conditions...

Think faster focus better and remember moreRewiring our brain to stay yo...

A Healthy Nervous System: A Delicate Balance

Does Evolution Explain Human Nature?

The Origin of the Human Mind: Brain Imaging and Evolution

The Neuroscience of Emotions

The Secret History of Silicon Valley

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Scientific Verification of Vedic Knowledge

29:23 - 3 years ago
A vast number of statements and materials presented in the ancient Vedic literatures can be shown to agree with modern scientific findings and they also reveal a highly developed scientific content in these literatures. The great cultural wealth of this knowledge is highly relevant in the modern world. Techniques used to show this agreement include: - Marine Archaeology of underwater sites (such as Dvaraka) - Satellite imagery of the Indus-Sarasvata River system - Carbon and Thermoluminiscence Dating of archaeological artifacts - Scientific Verification of Scriptural statements - Linguistic analysis of scripts found on archaeological artifacts - A Study of cultural continuity in all these categories.