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Visualizzazione dei post in ordine di data per la query pause. Ordina per pertinenza Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione dei post in ordine di data per la query pause. Ordina per pertinenza Mostra tutti i post

sabato 5 ottobre 2024

# brain: time delay in 'reservoir brain' as a reservoir network, a hypothesis


<< Both the predictive power and the memory storage capability of an artificial neural network called a reservoir computer increase when time delays are added into how the network processes signals, according to a new model. >>️

<< They also suggest that incorporating time delays could offer advantages to living neural networks (such as those found in human and animal brains). Such a finding would be tantalizing, as time delays are known to decrease performance in living systems. For example, for a baseball player facing an oncoming ball, a longer time delay between perception and action (which is learned from experience) will decrease the likelihood they hit a home run. Are there instead cases in which time delays increase an organism’s ability to perform some task? Has evolution shaped our brains, which could perhaps be thought of as a collection of reservoir computers, so that the time delay between one neuron sending a signal and a second receiving it is exactly the right length for understanding the visual and audio that constantly impinge upon our eyes and ears? Does adding time delays impact the number of neurons the brain needs to operate correctly? Further work is needed to answer these questions, but such work could lead to a new understanding of how biological organism’s function.  >>️

Sarah Marzen. Time Delays Improve Performance of Certain Neural Networks. Physics 17, 111. July 22, 2024. 

Also: pause, silence, jazz, network, brain, ai (artificial intell), in https://www.inkgmr.net/kwrds.html 

Keywords: gst, brain, network, neural network, reservoir network, reservoir computer, time delay, ai, artificial intelligence


sabato 15 luglio 2023

# brain: the sense of hearing, the sense of silence.


<< Do we only hear sounds? Or can we also hear silence? These questions are the subject of a centuries-old philosophical debate between two camps: the perceptual view (we literally hear silence), and the cognitive view (we only judge or infer silence). >>

<< In all cases (concerning seven experiments), silences elicited temporal distortions perfectly analogous to their sound-based counterparts, suggesting that auditory processing treats moments of silence the way it treats sounds. Silence is truly perceived, not merely inferred. >>️
Rui Zhe Goh, Ian B. Phillips, Chaz Firestone. The perception of silence. 
PNAS. 120 (29) e2301463120. Jul 10, 2023. 

Roberto Molar Candanosa. The sound of silence? Researchers prove we can  hear it. Johns Hopkins University - HUB. Jul 11, 2023. 

Researchers Prove We Hear the 
Sound of Silence. Jul 10, 2023. 

Also: silence, pause, sound, noise, perception, brain, in https://www.inkgmr.net/kwrds.html 

Keywords:  brain, perception, sound, noise, pause, silence


giovedì 12 agosto 2021

# brain: brain images of silence

<< When imagining music, the musicians' brain activity had the opposite electrical polarity to when they listened to it -- indicating different brain activations -- but the same type of activity as for imagery occurred in silent moments of the songs when people would have expected a note but there wasn't one. >>

<< There is no sensory input during silence and imagined music, so the neural activity we discovered is coming purely from the brain's predictions e.g., the brain's internal model of music. Even though the silent time-intervals do not have an input sound, we found consistent patterns of neural activity in those intervals, indicating that the brain reacts to both notes and silences of music. Ultimately, this underlines that music is more than a sensory experience for the brain as it engages the brain in a continuous attempt of predicting upcoming musical events. Our study has isolated the neural activity produced by that prediction process. And our results suggest that such prediction processes are at the foundation of both music listening and imagery. >> Giovanni Di Liberto. 

The music of silence: Imagining a song triggers similar brain activity to moments of mid-music silence. Trinity College Dublin. Aug 3, 2021. 


Guilhem Marion, Giovanni M. Di Liberto,  Shihab A. Shamma. The Music of Silence. Part I: Responses to Musical Imagery Encode Melodic Expectations and Acoustics. Journal of Neuroscience  JN-RM-0183-21. doi: 10.1523/ JNEUROSCI.0183-21.2021. 2 Aug 2, 2021.


Giovanni M. Di Liberto, Guilhem Marion,  Shihab A. Shamma. The music of silence. Part II: Music Listening Induces Imagery Responses. Journal of Neuroscience JN-RM-0184-21. doi: 10.1523/ JNEUROSCI.0184-21.2021. 
Aug 2, 2021.


Also

2123 - le dislocazioni pausali di Theo. 
(quasi-stochastic poetry). Notes. Feb 26, 2007.


A pause (acyclic pauses?)  approach to enhance and manage creativity. Mar 23, 2019.


We pronounce words more slowly compared with verbs and sometimes pause. May 20, 2018.



sabato 18 gennaio 2020

# gst: irregular sampling design to address behaviours

<< Animal movement studies have become ubiquitous in animal ecology for the estimation of space use and the analysis of movement behavior. In these studies, animal movement data are primarily collected at regular time intervals. (AA) propose an irregular sampling design that could lead to greater efficiency and information gain in animal movement studies. (The) novel sampling design, called lattice and random intermediate point (LARI), combines samples at regular and random time intervals. >>

<<  in each of the data and simulation examples explored in this paper, LARI sampling results in more accurate and precise parameter estimation and, thus, better prediction of missing data as well.  >>

Elizabeth Eisenhauer,  Ephraim Hanks. A lattice and random intermediate point sampling design for animal movement. Environmetrics. doi: 10.1002/env.2618. Jan 3, 2020.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/env.2618

Gail McCormick. Including irregular time intervals improves animal movement studies. Pennsylvania State University. Jan 15, 2020.

https://m.phys.org/news/2020-01-irregular-intervals-animal-movement.html

Also

keyword "pause" in Notes

https://inkpi.blogspot.com/search?q=pause

keyword "pause" in FonT

https://flashontrack.blogspot.com/search?q=pause


sabato 23 marzo 2019

# brain: a pause (acyclic pauses?)  approach to enhance and manage creativity

AA << find that participants  with quantity incentives outperform  the high creativity production of their fixed-pay counterparts only in the second-stage task, after the incubation period. Mediation analyses suggest that quantity-incentivized participants’ propensity to try more divergent ideas in the first stage sparks their creativity advantage in the second stage. >>

Steven J. Kachelmeier, Laura W.  Wang, Michael G. Williamson. Incentivizing the Creative Process:  From Initial Quantity to Eventual Creativity. Accounting Review. 2019 March (preprint).

http://aaahq.org/Portals/0/newsroom/Incentivizing%20the%20Creative%20Process.pdf

To stoke creativity, crank out ideas and then step away.  University of Texas at Austin. Mar 22, 2019.

https://m.phys.org/news/2019-03-stoke-creativity-crank-ideas.html  

Also

2123 - le dislocazioni pausali di Theo. Feb 26, 2007.

https://inkpi.blogspot.com/2007/02/2123-le-dislocazioni-pausali-di-theo.html

2107 - coll'anse d'apostrofo. Jan 14, 2007

https://inkpi.blogspot.com/2007/01/2107-coll-anse-d-apostrofo.html

domenica 20 maggio 2018

# lang: we pronounce words more slowly compared with verbs and sometimes pause

AA << study naturalistic speech from linguistically and culturally diverse populations from around the world >>

AA <<  show a robust tendency for slower speech before nouns as compared with verbs >>

Frank Seifart, Jan Strunk, et al.  Nouns slow down speech across structurally and culturally diverse languages. PNAS. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1800708115. May 14, 2018.

http://www.pnas.org/content/pnas/early/2018/05/09/1800708115/F1.large.jpg

http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2018/05/09/1800708115

<< English is peculiar (..) It can never be representative of human language in general >> Frank Seifart

<< In the years to come, as society grows more complex, the number of nouns available to us may grow exponentially. The diversity of its speakers, not so much >>

Alan Burdick. Why Nouns Slow Us Down, and Why Linguistics Might Be in a Bubble.  May 15, 2018.

https://www.newyorker.com/elements/lab-notes/why-nouns-slow-us-down-and-why-linguistics-might-be-in-a-bubble