首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
(1)The most complex object known to humanity is the human brain—and not only is it complex, but it is the seat of one of the few
(1)The most complex object known to humanity is the human brain—and not only is it complex, but it is the seat of one of the few
admin
2021-08-05
42
问题
(1)The most complex object known to humanity is the human brain—and not only is it complex, but it is the seat of one of the few natural phenomena that science has no purchase on at all, namely consciousness. To try to replicate something that is so poorly understood may therefore seem like hubris. But you have to start somewhere, and IBM and the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne(EPFL), in Switzerland, propose to start by replicating "in silico", as the jargon has it, one of the brain’s building blocks.
(2)In a partnership announced on June 6th of 2005, the two organizations said they would be working together to build a simulation of a structure known as a neo-cortical column on a type of IBM supercomputer that is currently used to study the molecular functioning of genes. If that works, they plan to use future, more powerful computers to link such simulated columns together into something mat mimics a brain.
(3)In a real brain, a neo-cortical column is a cylindrical element about a third of a millimeter in diameter and three millimeters long, containing some 10,000 nerve cells. It is these columns, arranged side by side like the cells of a honeycomb, which make up the famous "grey matter" that has become shorthand for human intelligence. The Blue Gene/L supercomputer mat will be used for the simulation consists of enough independent processors for each to be programmed to emulate an individual nerve cell in a column.
(4)The EPFL’s contribution to the Blue Brain Project, as it has inevitably been dubbed, will be to create a digital description of how the columns behave. Its Brain Mind Institute has what is generally regarded as the world’s most extensive set of data on the machinations of the neo-cortex—the columns’ natural habitat and the part of the brain responsible for learning, memory, language and complex thought. This database will provide the raw material for me simulation. Biologists and computer scientists will then collaborate to connect the artificial nerve cells up in a way that mimics nature. They will do so by assigning electrical properties to them, and telling them how to communicate with each other and how they should modify their connections with one another depending on their activity.
(5)That will be no mean feat. Even a single nerve cell is complicated, not least because each one has about 10,000 connections with others. And nerve cells come in great variety—relying, for example, on different chemical transmitters to carry messages across those connections. Eventually, however, a digital representation of an entire column should emerge.
(6)This part of the project is expected to take two to three years. From then on, things will go in two directions simultaneously. One will be to "grow" more columns(the human brain contains about 1 million of mem)and get them to interact with one another. The second will be to work at a more elementary level— mat is, to simulate the molecular structure of the brain, and to look at the influence of gene expression on brain function.
(7)Assuming that the growth of computing power continues to follow Moore’s Law, Charles Peck, the leader of IBM’s side of the collaboration, reckons it should be feasible to emulate an entire human brain in silico this way in ten to fifteen years. Such an artificial brain would, of course, be a powerful research tool. It would allow neurological experiments that currently take days in a "web lab" to be conducted in seconds. The researchers hope, for instance, that their simulated brain will reveal the secrets of how certain psychiatric and neurological disorders develop. But that is probably not the real reason for doing it. The most interesting questions, surely, are whether such an artificial brain will be intelligent, or conscious, or both.
What does the sentence "That will be no mean feat" in the fifth paragraph stands for?
选项
A、A single nerve cell is complicated to identify across connections.
B、What the neo-cortex controls is quite difficult to understand.
C、A digital representation of an entire column is time-consuming.
D、It is rather arduous to connect the artificial nerve cells up.
答案
D
解析
该句在文中起承上启下的作用:上文讲科学家试图将人造神经细胞连接起来,下文却指出神经细胞结构复杂,由此可知该句是在暗示“连接人造神经并非易事”,故D正确。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/AJIK777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Thequestionofwhetherlanguagesshapethewaywethinkgobackcenturies;Charlemagneproclaimedthat"tohaveasecond【S1】__
Thequestionofwhetherlanguagesshapethewaywethinkgobackcenturies;Charlemagneproclaimedthat"tohaveasecond【S1】__
Ineveryeconomicsystem,entrepreneursandmanagersbringtogethernaturalresources,labor,andtechnologytoproduceanddi
Technologiescollapsethedistancebetweenadesireanditsfulfillmentbyreducingeitherthetimeortheeffortinvolved.Thi
IngmaBergman’slatestworkasascreenwriteris"Sunday’sChildren".SetinruralSwedenduringthelate1920s,thestorycen
Humanity’shighlydevelopedabilitytocommunicateverballyisouressence.Withourtremendousvocabulary,wewouldperhapsbe【
Secondlanguageteachingshouldfocusonencouragingacquisition,andonprovidinginputthatstimulatestheconscious【S1】______
Secondlanguageteachingshouldfocusonencouragingacquisition,andonprovidinginputthatstimulatestheconscious【S1】______
Secondlanguageteachingshouldfocusonencouragingacquisition,andonprovidinginputthatstimulatestheconscious【S1】______
随机试题
选用低合金焊条,首先要遵守等强度原则,有时还要考虑化学成分等因素。()
十进制数211转换成二进制数为_______。
下列关于颈椎张口位摄影,错误的是
《消费者权益保护法》规定,消费者在购买、使用商品和接受服务时
女性,26岁,两手指端发白、青紫、潮红继而恢复正常,每于冬春发作频繁,有“红斑狼疮”病史,桡动脉波动良好,最可能的诊断是()。
识记过的内容在一定条件下不能或错误地恢复和提取都叫遗忘。()
A、B两城由一条河流相连,轮船匀速前进,从A城到B城需行3天时间,从B城到A城需行4天时间,从A城放一个无动力的木筏,它漂到B城需几天?()
下列各项中,不具有行政主体资格的是()。
设y=xlnx,求f(n)(1)。
BeforeIarrivedhomeintheevening,mymother(get)______thesupperready.
最新回复
(
0
)