Human brain configuration

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its faster then the supercomputers!! it takes a lot of brain power to process visual in our braibn, thinking. a normal brain is having about 1680GHz of power as per some of the site i found on google.so the normal supercomputer is aint comparable with human brain. we have discussed this thing on TE before i guess.
 
Computer vs The Brain
the link speaks..
Reps welcomed ;)
1999's fastest PC processor chip on the market was a 700 MHz pentium that did 4200 MIPS. By simple calculation, we can see that we would need at least 24,000 of these processors in a system to match up to the total speed of the brain !! (Which means the brain is like a 168,0000 MHz Pentium computer). But even so, other factors like memory and the complexity of the system needed to handle so many processors will not be a simple task. Because of these factors, the figures we so childishly calculated will most probably be a very serious underestimate.
 
nvidiabeast said:
ive posted link before ur message :bleh: see up :cool: see my brain processing power ;)

hey brainy boy

i just wanted the link to the TE posts as u said that this has been discussed on TE before....:D
 
Read this in a Time issue a few years ago; the human brain can hold just 220mb worth of data and that what's makes it so efficient is in fact it's inefficiency to retain trivial data and cross-linking everything.
 
Found some really cool stuff out there

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As we yawn and open our eyes in the morning, the brain stem sends little puffs of nitric oxide to another part of the brain, the thalamus, which then directs it elsewhere. 

Like a computer booting up its operating system before running more complicated programs, the nitric oxide triggers certain functions that set the stage for more complex brain operations, according to a new study.

In these first moments of the day, sensory information floods the system—the bright sunlight coming through the curtains, the time on the screeching alarm clock—and all of it needs to be processed and organized, so the brain can understand its surroundings and begin to perform more complex tasks.

"The thinking part of the brain is applying a sort of stencil to the information coming in and what the nitric oxide is doing is allowing more refinement of that stencil," says Dwayne Godwin, an associate professor at Wake Forest University and lead author of the study, which was funded by the National Eye Institute.

The little two-atom molecule, it seems, is partly responsible for our ability to perceive whatever it is we're sensing. 
[IMG]http://www.livescience.com/images/060817_brain_thalamus_03.jpg[/IMG]
The finding, published last week in the journal Neuroscience, changes the way scientists understand nitric oxide's role in the brain, and it also has them rethinking the function of the thalamus, where it is released.  The thalamus was thought to be a fairly primitive structure, sort of a gate that could either open and allow sensory information to stream into the cortex, the higher functioning part of the brain, or cut off the flow entirely.

Godwin says the new research shows it's more accurate to think of the thalamus not as a gate but as a club bouncer, who doesn't simply allow a huge rush of people to go in or no one at all, but picks and chooses whom to let in and out.

"Instead of vision being a process going straight from eye to cortex, it's more of a loop," Godwin explained. "This constitutes a new role for the thalamus in directing, not just modulating."

While this study is the first to identify nitric oxide's role in the thalamus, elsewhere in the body it was already known to have an important, if somewhat different function. The molecule is actually integral to controlling blood flow and is, in fact, the molecule Viagra targets in order to increase blood flow to the penis.

The teeny molecule might have other medical uses.

"This study shows a unique role for nitric oxide. It may help us to someday understand what goes wrong in diseases that affect cognitive processing, such as attention deficit disorder or schizophrenia, and it adds to our fundamental understanding of how we perceive the world around us," Godwin said.
 
Mine regularly crashes like a computer. think i'm running MS OS of some sort.

and i need more ram.

and i might be overclocked - the bus speed ain't set right - it goes real quick but over heats...
 
Well the comparison is not as simple as that. A Micro Processor has a fixed architecture. In contrast the brain itself does not stay in a fixed state. Neural links are formed/broken all the time making it an evolving processor.

The closest computational model we have that is similar to the brain is ANN (Artificial Neural Networks), But even the most complex ANN we can build though computers are nothing compared to the brain. Most of the ANN are fairly linear when it comes to the links while brain is massively parallel and flexible. If the Neural links in the a single human brain are untangled into a single chain/thead, that thread would be enough to circle the distance between the earth and the moon 3 times.

Most people of above average intellegence are supposed to use about 5~6% of the brains true capabilities. Infact a Rats brain can beat the fastest supercomputers that we have.

If anyone is interested in the computational aspects of brain without going into biology, try googling for material on Cognitive Science.
 
these articles gives me a PROUD feeling
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