Scientists just taught hundreds of thousands of neurons in a dish to play Pong. Using a series of strategically timed and placed electrical zaps, the neurons not only learned the game in a virtual ...
I suck at Pong, but apparently if you take my brain out of my skull, mash it up until it’s nothing more than a pile of cells, and hook it up to a computer, I might actually be good at it. Scientists ...
细胞版本的电子游戏,挑战了关于智能的假设。 在覆有电极的培养皿中,数十万人类神经细胞学会了玩经典电子游戏Pong。 早期电子游戏Pong的广告。提供:Interfoto/Alamy 这些细胞自此成功加入Pong日益增长的玩家龙虎榜,榜上有名的还包括学会用鼻子控制摇杆的猪 ...
Have you ever heard of a computer made by connecting living brain cells to electronic devices? Sound like something out of a nightmare or a dystopian sci-fi novel? It's not. This is the subject of a ...
We may receive a commission on purchases made from links. The researchers, who believe the culture is too primitive to be conscious, noted that DishBrain showed signs of "apparent learning within five ...
Just about anyone can play Pong, the classic table tennis arcade game. No, seriously, even monkeys can play it, with the right equipment. And artificial intelligence can play Pong, obviously — video ...
澳大利亚与英国研究小组近日宣布,他们在皮氏培养皿中培育的人脑细胞成功学会游玩乒乓球游戏《PONG》的单人模式。 澳大利亚 Cortical Labs的研究小组的主要研究方向是融合尖端科技与工学的合成生物学,在近年来他们为了探索仅在科幻作品中出现过的生物学 ...
A Melbourne-led team has for the first time shown that 800,000 brain cells living in a dish can perform goal-directed tasks—in this case the simple tennis-like computer game, Pong. The results of the ...
Eric Mack has been a CNET contributor since 2011. Eric and his family live 100% energy and water independent on his off-grid compound in the New Mexico desert. Eric uses his passion for writing about ...
Cortical Labs, an Australian company that builds biological computer chips, taught pools of brain cells how to play Pong. Yes, you read that correctly! Electrical pulses from the arrays create virtual ...
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