
Synopsis
'Excellent' - Geoffrey Hinton, the 'godfather of AI' and 2024 Nobel Laureate in Physics
'An indispensable guide to both ourselves and the coming age of AI' - Mustafa Suleyman, bestselling co-author of The Coming Wave
How does our consciousness — our ability to think, feel and act — actually work? How is this human intelligence different from artificial intelligence? And as we...
Details
368 pages
Imprint: Macmillan
Reviews
The chatbots we have today use artificial neural networks that were originally developed as models of how the mind works. This book does an excellent job of explaining the ideas that led to these neural networks without requiring any prior knowledge of either mathematics or psychology. Important concepts like distributed representations are explained gently and skillfully. After reading this book you will have much better understanding of both chatbots and the mindGeoffrey E. Hinton, 2024 Nobel Laureate in Physics
This book takes you on a fascinating journey to discover how a three-pound blob of meat between your ears — your brain — dynamically wires itself to the world to create the whirlwind of electrical, chemical and magnetic signals called *your mind*. Can AI have a mind? Read this book and see what you thinkLisa Feldman Barrett, author of How Emotions Are Made
Neural networks define both our brains and, no accident, modern AI systems. Each is built out of simple processing units. But linked together these building blocks create systems of immense complexity that underpin not just our intelligence but our wants, goals and even consciousness. This book tells the vital, fascinating story of how. By providing a clear account of how mind-like abilities emerge—in both humans and machines—Suri and McClelland offer an indispensable guide to both ourselves and the coming age of AIMustafa Suleyman, bestselling co-author of The Coming Wave
Start with a type of simple building block, throw a zillion copies of them together and – more is different! – the blocks self-organize into a complex system with properties indescribable at the reductive level. Nowhere is this phenomenon more interesting than when "mind" emerges from billions of neurons, and no one is better positioned to explain how neural networks produce minds than these pioneering authors. This superb book is deeply stimulating and disarmingly accessibleRobert Sapolsky, author of Determined