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CIRCLE WITH A DOT

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  3. Sigh.

Sigh.

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  • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

    Sigh.

    So it turns out we've mapped the neural connectome of Drosophila *and simulated it in silico*.

    Link Preview Image
    FlyWire

    favicon

    (flywire.ai)

    Pop-sci explainer here:

    Link Preview Image
    Whole Brain Emulation Achieved: Scientists Run a Fruit Fly Brain in Simulation | RathBiotaClan

    Scientists ran a real fruit fly brain in simulation using the FlyWire connectome, achieving the first working whole brain emulation.

    favicon

    RathBiotaClan (www.rathbiotaclan.com)

    Key quote: "The step from a complete connectome to a working computational brain model is not trivial." And there's an even more important finding in this screenshot (alt text via OCR):

    "The wiring is the computation".

    /1

    zimzat@mastodon.socialZ This user is from outside of this forum
    zimzat@mastodon.socialZ This user is from outside of this forum
    zimzat@mastodon.social
    wrote last edited by
    #62

    @cstross Interesting; I've suspected that the first AGI would have to be modeled after our own brain and would have to go through the same growing and learning and sensory feedback loops we do, and at probably the same rate we do. Any benefit of an AGI, over a human, would be inherent to the medium (cloning, save/restore) and not innately super intelligence. It would also come with its own challenges and limitations (no human has ever lived 200 years, would recall become a limiting factor?).

    cstross@wandering.shopC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

      Sigh.

      So it turns out we've mapped the neural connectome of Drosophila *and simulated it in silico*.

      Link Preview Image
      FlyWire

      favicon

      (flywire.ai)

      Pop-sci explainer here:

      Link Preview Image
      Whole Brain Emulation Achieved: Scientists Run a Fruit Fly Brain in Simulation | RathBiotaClan

      Scientists ran a real fruit fly brain in simulation using the FlyWire connectome, achieving the first working whole brain emulation.

      favicon

      RathBiotaClan (www.rathbiotaclan.com)

      Key quote: "The step from a complete connectome to a working computational brain model is not trivial." And there's an even more important finding in this screenshot (alt text via OCR):

      "The wiring is the computation".

      /1

      breathoflife@infosec.exchangeB This user is from outside of this forum
      breathoflife@infosec.exchangeB This user is from outside of this forum
      breathoflife@infosec.exchange
      wrote last edited by
      #63

      @cstross

      that's... interesting.

      but can someone make an asic of this brain and get it to run doom
      on debian linux
      with an xfce desktop environment?

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

        Sigh.

        So it turns out we've mapped the neural connectome of Drosophila *and simulated it in silico*.

        Link Preview Image
        FlyWire

        favicon

        (flywire.ai)

        Pop-sci explainer here:

        Link Preview Image
        Whole Brain Emulation Achieved: Scientists Run a Fruit Fly Brain in Simulation | RathBiotaClan

        Scientists ran a real fruit fly brain in simulation using the FlyWire connectome, achieving the first working whole brain emulation.

        favicon

        RathBiotaClan (www.rathbiotaclan.com)

        Key quote: "The step from a complete connectome to a working computational brain model is not trivial." And there's an even more important finding in this screenshot (alt text via OCR):

        "The wiring is the computation".

        /1

        ross@hachyderm.ioR This user is from outside of this forum
        ross@hachyderm.ioR This user is from outside of this forum
        ross@hachyderm.io
        wrote last edited by
        #64

        @cstross Considering I'm re-reading Iain M. Banks right now, this is quite relevant, though I'm struggling to remember what book it was that had the "if you simulate perfectly every neurone" argument for sentience of drones.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • breathoflife@infosec.exchangeB This user is from outside of this forum
          breathoflife@infosec.exchangeB This user is from outside of this forum
          breathoflife@infosec.exchange
          wrote last edited by
          #65

          @petealexharris @cstross

          it's a base 4 system, since you can have adenine-thymine, thymine-adenine, cytosine-guanine and guanine-cytosine pairs, so automatically you're storing far more information within a single place value compared to binary.

          drwho@masto.hackers.townD 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

            But I'm REALLY HAPPY right now because this kinda-sorta validates the key premise of the SF novel I just handed in last month (which involves serial reincarnation via destructive brain-slicing-and-imaging then imprinting onto an immature cortex, and then explores its disastrous societal failure modes).

            ... And it also hints that artificial consciousness might, eventually, be possible, if only via the hard path of doing it the same way we do it, only in simulation in silico.

            /6 (ends)

            resuna@ohai.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
            resuna@ohai.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
            resuna@ohai.social
            wrote last edited by
            #66

            @cstross

            Kind of the backstory for @gregeganSF's "Permutation City" scaled down a few dozen orders of magnitude.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

              @mwl Also very cool, the Indian sci/tech news website that ran that feature! (From the writing style I initially thought it might be AI slop, but no: Indian English is just a bit different.)

              solitha@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
              solitha@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
              solitha@mastodon.social
              wrote last edited by
              #67

              @cstross Oh, so that wasn't just me.

              Between that and the crawler at the top I had to give up trying to read it. A shame, it seemed interesting.

              @mwl

              cstross@wandering.shopC 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • boydstephensmithjr@hachyderm.ioB boydstephensmithjr@hachyderm.io

                RE: https://wandering.shop/@cstross/116210321731463885

                BTW, we can already preserve a large-mammal-scale connectome after death: https://www.brainpreservation.org/tech-prize/

                Related, if you haven't seen AMC's Pantheon, you might want to take a look. It involves uploaded human intelligence via destructive brain scan.

                cstross@wandering.shopC This user is from outside of this forum
                cstross@wandering.shopC This user is from outside of this forum
                cstross@wandering.shop
                wrote last edited by
                #68

                @BoydStephenSmithJr If that's TV or film, I can't cope with TV or film. (Fucked eyeballs *and* a dose of what is probably AuDHD that means I don't have the attention span, either.)

                boydstephensmithjr@hachyderm.ioB 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • zimzat@mastodon.socialZ zimzat@mastodon.social

                  @cstross Interesting; I've suspected that the first AGI would have to be modeled after our own brain and would have to go through the same growing and learning and sensory feedback loops we do, and at probably the same rate we do. Any benefit of an AGI, over a human, would be inherent to the medium (cloning, save/restore) and not innately super intelligence. It would also come with its own challenges and limitations (no human has ever lived 200 years, would recall become a limiting factor?).

                  cstross@wandering.shopC This user is from outside of this forum
                  cstross@wandering.shopC This user is from outside of this forum
                  cstross@wandering.shop
                  wrote last edited by
                  #69

                  @zimzat You haven't read "Saturn's Children", have you? (Hint: I wrote it in 2007; it made the Hugo shortlist for best novel.)

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • solitha@mastodon.socialS solitha@mastodon.social

                    @cstross Oh, so that wasn't just me.

                    Between that and the crawler at the top I had to give up trying to read it. A shame, it seemed interesting.

                    @mwl

                    cstross@wandering.shopC This user is from outside of this forum
                    cstross@wandering.shopC This user is from outside of this forum
                    cstross@wandering.shop
                    wrote last edited by
                    #70

                    @solitha @mwl If you want to keep up with the sciences in future you're going to have to get used to Indian English, or even learn Mandarin.

                    mwl@io.mwl.ioM raganwald@social.bau-ha.usR solitha@mastodon.socialS 3 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

                      @solitha @mwl If you want to keep up with the sciences in future you're going to have to get used to Indian English, or even learn Mandarin.

                      mwl@io.mwl.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
                      mwl@io.mwl.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
                      mwl@io.mwl.io
                      wrote last edited by
                      #71

                      @cstross @solitha

                      Indian English feels odd at first, but after a little practice it goes down easily. The more variants of a language you're familiar with, the more easily you add new ones.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

                        Sigh.

                        So it turns out we've mapped the neural connectome of Drosophila *and simulated it in silico*.

                        Link Preview Image
                        FlyWire

                        favicon

                        (flywire.ai)

                        Pop-sci explainer here:

                        Link Preview Image
                        Whole Brain Emulation Achieved: Scientists Run a Fruit Fly Brain in Simulation | RathBiotaClan

                        Scientists ran a real fruit fly brain in simulation using the FlyWire connectome, achieving the first working whole brain emulation.

                        favicon

                        RathBiotaClan (www.rathbiotaclan.com)

                        Key quote: "The step from a complete connectome to a working computational brain model is not trivial." And there's an even more important finding in this screenshot (alt text via OCR):

                        "The wiring is the computation".

                        /1

                        legit_spaghetti@mastodo.neoliber.alL This user is from outside of this forum
                        legit_spaghetti@mastodo.neoliber.alL This user is from outside of this forum
                        legit_spaghetti@mastodo.neoliber.al
                        wrote last edited by
                        #72

                        @cstross So, if the behaviors and functions of a fruit fly brain arise not simply because you mash a whole bunch of neurons together and hope for the best but because of billions of years of natural selection, that to me is a precisely delivered bullet straight through the hear of the idea that current LLM-based "Ai" will yield human-like consciousness if only we make the models big enough.

                        Also, I'd be remiss if I didn't add: Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.

                        riley@toot.catR 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

                          But I'm REALLY HAPPY right now because this kinda-sorta validates the key premise of the SF novel I just handed in last month (which involves serial reincarnation via destructive brain-slicing-and-imaging then imprinting onto an immature cortex, and then explores its disastrous societal failure modes).

                          ... And it also hints that artificial consciousness might, eventually, be possible, if only via the hard path of doing it the same way we do it, only in simulation in silico.

                          /6 (ends)

                          eldadoinquieto@mastorol.esE This user is from outside of this forum
                          eldadoinquieto@mastorol.esE This user is from outside of this forum
                          eldadoinquieto@mastorol.es
                          wrote last edited by
                          #73

                          @cstross So it seems this could be the beginning of cortical stacks development, isn't it?

                          graydon@canada.masto.hostG 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • tbortels@infosec.exchangeT This user is from outside of this forum
                            tbortels@infosec.exchangeT This user is from outside of this forum
                            tbortels@infosec.exchange
                            wrote last edited by
                            #74

                            @cstross @CynAq

                            It doesn't mean LLMs are a dead end, even though yeah they probably are.

                            It means that the way LLMs "reason", or whatever the heck you want to call it, is not at some fundamental level the way meat brains do it. We are more "hardware" (or firmware or wetware or whatever) at the basic level than software/state.

                            Don't be too excited. It is *highly unlikely* that evolution builds brains in an optimal manner. It may well be we eventually build our own successors. We just won't (quickly/soon) build better "us"es.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

                              @BoydStephenSmithJr If that's TV or film, I can't cope with TV or film. (Fucked eyeballs *and* a dose of what is probably AuDHD that means I don't have the attention span, either.)

                              boydstephensmithjr@hachyderm.ioB This user is from outside of this forum
                              boydstephensmithjr@hachyderm.ioB This user is from outside of this forum
                              boydstephensmithjr@hachyderm.io
                              wrote last edited by
                              #75

                              @cstross It is TV. Sorry you can't enjoy it that way. I believe it is based on "The Gods ..." series by Ken Liu, if you can find that in print or audiobook. I've not read that series.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

                                ... The next step on from Drosophila, the mouse brain, is 560 times larger—never mind a vastly more complex human brain. And to get the murine connectome we'll have to chop up *a lot* of brains: a human upload won't pass any kind of medical ethics review at this point!

                                But near-term, it's expected to yield "fundamentally new architectural principles for AI systems that are more sample-efficient, more robust, and more capable of behavioral generalization than current approaches"

                                /5

                                mikestok@mstdn.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                                mikestok@mstdn.caM This user is from outside of this forum
                                mikestok@mstdn.ca
                                wrote last edited by
                                #76

                                @cstross maybe a Trump brain wouldn’t be that much more complex than a fruit fly, though I’m not sure it’s useful if we’re looking for replicating a decent human being’s processing.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • legit_spaghetti@mastodo.neoliber.alL legit_spaghetti@mastodo.neoliber.al

                                  @cstross So, if the behaviors and functions of a fruit fly brain arise not simply because you mash a whole bunch of neurons together and hope for the best but because of billions of years of natural selection, that to me is a precisely delivered bullet straight through the hear of the idea that current LLM-based "Ai" will yield human-like consciousness if only we make the models big enough.

                                  Also, I'd be remiss if I didn't add: Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.

                                  riley@toot.catR This user is from outside of this forum
                                  riley@toot.catR This user is from outside of this forum
                                  riley@toot.cat
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #77

                                  @Legit_Spaghetti Er, are you sure you understand how evolution works? And the difference between a genetically fixed brain plan and one whose developmental plan includes variable neuronal migration as an inherent part of the process?

                                  @cstross

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • breathoflife@infosec.exchangeB breathoflife@infosec.exchange

                                    @petealexharris @cstross

                                    it's a base 4 system, since you can have adenine-thymine, thymine-adenine, cytosine-guanine and guanine-cytosine pairs, so automatically you're storing far more information within a single place value compared to binary.

                                    drwho@masto.hackers.townD This user is from outside of this forum
                                    drwho@masto.hackers.townD This user is from outside of this forum
                                    drwho@masto.hackers.town
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #78

                                    @breathOfLife @petealexharris @cstross Plus, some genes can overlap, so you can get a lot more instructional data in the same length of base-4 values than it seems.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

                                      @solitha @mwl If you want to keep up with the sciences in future you're going to have to get used to Indian English, or even learn Mandarin.

                                      raganwald@social.bau-ha.usR This user is from outside of this forum
                                      raganwald@social.bau-ha.usR This user is from outside of this forum
                                      raganwald@social.bau-ha.us
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #79

                                      @cstross

                                      Heh heh.

                                      Link Preview Image
                                      Looper - You should go to China.

                                      Looper (2012)© Sony Pictures Digital Productions Inc. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1276104/http://www.loopermovie.com/Abe: This time travel crap, just fries y...

                                      favicon

                                      YouTube (www.youtube.com)

                                      @solitha @mwl

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • P phosphenes@mastodon.social

                                        @cstross

                                        Someone commented that now we've uploaded a fly brain it can eat virtual shit long after the rest of us are a distant memory.

                                        P This user is from outside of this forum
                                        P This user is from outside of this forum
                                        phosphenes@mastodon.social
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #80

                                        @cstross

                                        By pure coincidence this came out today:

                                        Link Preview Image
                                        Cyanide & Happiness (Explosm.net)

                                        favicon

                                        (explosm.net)

                                        Link Preview Image
                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • krnlg@mastodon.socialK krnlg@mastodon.social

                                          @cstross
                                          But I suppose I'm talking about myself really. I don't mean that a scientist researching this stuff can't be kind. I mean that to me, going down the rabbit hole of the technical details of how a creature's mind works is not compatible with treating the creature as a being.

                                          I rescue flies if they get stuck in water. I hate this research.

                                          solitha@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                                          solitha@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                                          solitha@mastodon.social
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #81

                                          @krnlg I get what you're saying here, treating all creatures as the ends rather than the means.

                                          But consider how happy you'd be in a world full of the suffering that we've learned how to prevent.

                                          I don't like it, but I accept the trade-off within ethical guidelines.

                                          @cstross

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