How intelligence happens / John Duncan.
- Duncan, John, 1953 May 15-
- Date:
- [2010], ©2010
- Books
About this work
Description
Human intelligence is among the most powerful forces on earth. It builds sprawling cities, vast cornfields, coffee plantations, and complex microchips; it takes us from the atom to the limits of the universe. Understanding how brains build intelligence is among the most fascinating challenges of modern science. How does the biological brain, a collection of billions of cells, enable us to do things no other species can do? In this book the author, a scientist who has spent thirty years studying the human brain, offers an adventure story, the story of the hunt for basic principles of human intelligence, behavior, and thought. Using results drawn from classical studies of intelligence testing; from attempts to build computers that think; from studies of how minds change after brain damage; from modern discoveries of brain imaging; and from groundbreaking recent research, he synthesizes often difficult to understand information. He explains how brains break down problems into useful, solvable parts and then assemble these parts into the complex mental programs of human thought and action. Moving from the foundations of psychology, artificial intelligence, and neuroscience to the most current scientific thinking, this book is for all those curious to understand how their own mind works.
Publication/Creation
Physical description
Contributors
Contents
Bibliographic information
Languages
Where to find it
Location Status Medical CollectionBF431 2010D86hOpen shelves
Permanent link
Identifiers
ISBN
- 9780300154115
- 0300154119