[ExI] How the brain builds sentences, neuron by neuron
Brent Allsop
brent.allsop at gmail.com
Sun Jun 21 21:41:05 UTC 2026
" For some specialists such as Friederici, this disconnect leaves a key
question unanswered: if the building blocks of language are so isolated,
how do they rapidly unite to create fluent speech? "
Yea, the binding problem, or the fundamental question about how we
compute/bind. How does one be aware of multiple voxels of colors, all at
the same time, as one gestalt experience or momdel.
AI does binding/computing with brute force discrete logic gates, which is
obviously a far less efficient way than whatever we are doing with bound
phenomenal qualities.
On Sun, Jun 21, 2026 at 9:54 AM Ben Zaiboc via extropy-chat <
extropy-chat at lists.extropy.org> wrote:
> On 21/06/2026 14:58, John Clark wrote:
> > It looks like the human brain and chatbots use the same basic method for
> generating and understanding language. The following article appeared in
> the June 17 2026 issue of the journal Nature:
> >
> > How the brain builds sentences, neuron by neuron
>
>
> Excellent. It should now be easier to build systems that replicate the
> other few hundred functions of the brain that work together to create 'a
> person'.
>
> If we can do that, we'd be well on the way to full AGI, I reckon.
>
> --
> Ben
>
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