Yes, i've seen that, and i was very excited when i first heard about it. But note that within it is described as, "how does *cortex* control behaviour?". I think SMF is a very important research area, (one that i've been thinking about for a long time), but the work as i understand it (from what i was told in private exchanges) is very rudimentary. Unlike the work with cortex, there is no attempt to re-engineer how other parts of the brain enact SMF. In fact, the approach was decidedly un-biological.

On 6/30/2015 11:01 AM, Dillon Bender wrote:

Lol, okay...

Have you watched this? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZFazR5yqesk

Though, technically, they aren’t developing any structure per se, just the algorithms. This talk is obviously about including the algorithms behind sub-cortical structures. It’s the main focus right now. I’m not pretending anything.

Jeff also explains his goals for integrating sensorimotor feedback in this Q&A session: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HRwf2uQTiWU

- Dillon

*From:*nupic [mailto:[email protected]] *On Behalf Of *Matthew Lohbihler
*Sent:* Tuesday, June 30, 2015 9:37 AM
*To:* Dillon Bender
*Subject:* Re: Response to Jeff Hawkins interview.

Actually, he doesn't. Jeff talks about cortex all the time. I have never seen any talk of, research into, or plans to develop any other structure. Don't get me wrong: cortex is a key thing. But let's not pretend that, publicly anyway, anything else matters much to Numenta at the moment.

On 6/30/2015 10:20 AM, Dillon Bender wrote:

    Right, Jeff talks about this all the time. An isolated cortex
    knows virtually nothing and can cause nothing. It requires the
    sub-cortical structures like the basal ganglia for learning
    sensorimotor perception and control. That aspect will no doubt
    need to be included in HTM in some form. But like he also says all
    the time, there’s no reason it has to resemble natural, humanoid
    functions. All the cortical principles will be applied generally
    to any sensory domain, limited by our imagination. No
    circumvention of the biological algorithm is planned.

    - Dillon

    *From:*nupic [mailto:[email protected]] *On Behalf
    Of *Matthew Lohbihler
    *Sent:* Tuesday, June 30, 2015 9:03 AM
    *To:* Dillon Bender
    *Subject:* Re: Response to Jeff Hawkins interview.

    I tend to agree with John. I suspect that intelligence developed
    upon a neurological substrate without which that cortex can't
    function completely. Maybe, maybe, MI can still be developed by
    circumventing the substrate, but we'll learn so much more by
    developing it too.


    On 6/30/2015 9:49 AM, Dillon Bender wrote:

        <John> "And I think we'll have to work our way through the whole animal 
kingdom to get a humanoid robot working."

        If what you mean is that researchers should start with building simple 
organisms and then bolt on the more recently evolved systems, then I think this 
is false. The human brain contains the entirety of non-mammal to mammal 
evolution, so there is no reason to model non-mammals.

        I think you have missed out on Numenta's current research goals to work 
sensorimotor into CLA theory, because they realized before you that intelligence 
"needs to be embodied with sensory-motor loop at the core of its 
functionality." They have stated many times that the previous version of the theory 
modeled L2/3 of the cortex, and now adding L4 (and soon L5) will help close the 
sensorimotor loop.

        - Dillon

        -----Original Message-----

        From: nupic [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of John 
Blackburn

        Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2015 4:55 AM

        To: Dillon Bender

        Subject: Re: Response to Jeff Hawkins interview.

        Sorry to reopen this thread, I missed it! David, I wanted to comment on 
what you said on Facebook:

        2.) For the first time in human history, we have an algorithm which 
models activity in the neocortex and performs with true intelligence exactly 
**how** the brain does it (its the HOW that is truly important here). ...and by 
the way, this was also contributed by Jeff Hawkins and Numenta.

        "performs with true intelligence" is a pretty bold claim. If this is 
the case, how come there are no very convincing examples of HTM working with human like 
intelligence? The Hotgym example is nice but it is really no better than what could be 
achieved with many existing neural networks. Echo state networks have been around for 
years and can make temporal predictions quite well. I recently presented some time 
sequence data relating to a bridge to this forum but HTM did not succeed in modelling 
this (ESNs worked much better). So outside of Hotgym, what really compelling demos do you 
have? I've been away for a while so maybe I missed something...

        I am also rather concerned HTM needs swarming before it can model anything. Isn't 
that "cheating" in a way? It seems the HTM is rather fragile and needs a lot of 
help. The human brain does not have this luxury it just has to cope with whatever data it 
gets.

        I'm also not convinced the neocortex is everything as Jeff Hawkins 
thinks. I seriously doubt the bulk of the brain is just scaffolding.

        I've been told birds have no neocortex but are capable of very 
intelligent behaviour including constructing tools. Meanwhile I don't see any 
AI robot capable of even ant-like intelligence. (ants are

        amazing!) Has anyone even constructed a robot based on HTM?

        Personally I don't think a a disembodied computer can ever be 
intelligent (not even ant-like intelligence). IMO a robot (and it must BE a 
robot) needs to be embodied with sensory-motor loop at the core of its 
functionality to start behaving like an animal. (animals are the only things we 
know that show intelligence: clouds don't, volcanos don't, computers don't). 
And I think we'll have to work our way through the whole animal kingdom to get 
a humanoid robot working.

        John.

        On Mon, May 25, 2015 at 10:17 PM, cogmission (David 
Ray)<[email protected]>  <mailto:[email protected]>  wrote:

            You're probably right :-)

            On Mon, May 25, 2015 at 4:16 PM, Matthew Lohbihler

            <[email protected]>  <mailto:[email protected]>  
wrote:

                Yes, I agree. Except for the part about checking up on us. As i

                mentioned before, indifference to us seems to me to be more the

                default than caring about us.

                On 5/25/2015 5:03 PM, cogmission (David Ray) wrote:

                Let me try and think this through. Only in the context of 
scarcity

                does the question of AGI **or** us come about. Where there is no

                scarcity, I think an AGI will just go about its business - 
peeking in

                from time to time to make sure we're doing ok. Why in a universe

                where it can go anywhere it wants and produce infinite energy 
and not

                be bound by our planet, would a super-super intelligent being 
even be

                obsessed over us, when it could merely go someplace else? I 
honestly

                thing that is the way it will be. (and maybe is already!)

                On Mon, May 25, 2015 at 3:56 PM, Matthew Lohbihler

                <[email protected]>  
<mailto:[email protected]>  wrote:

                    Forgive me David, but these are very loose definitions, and 
i've

                    lost track of how they relate back to what an AGI will 
think about

                    humanity. But to use your terms - hopefully accurately - 
what if the

                    AGI satisfies its sentient need for "others" by creating 
other AGIs,

                    ones that it can love and appreciate? I doubt humans would 
ever be

                    up such a task, unless 1) as pets, or 2) with cybernetic 
improvements.

                    On 5/25/2015 4:37 PM, David Ray wrote:

                    Observation is the phenomenon of distinction, in the domain 
of language.

                    The universe consists of two things, content and context. 
Content

                    depends on its boundaries in order to exist. It depends on 
what it

                    is not for it's being. Context is the space for things to 
be, though

                    it is not quite space because space is yet another thing. 
It has no

                    boundaries and it cannot be arrived at by assembling all of 
its content.

                    Ideas; love, hate, our sense of who we are, our histories 
what we

                    know to be true all of those are content. Context is what 
allows for

                    that stuff to be. And all of it lives in language without 
which there would be nothing.

                    There maybe would be a "drift" but we wouldn't know about 
it and we

                    wouldn't be able to observe it.

                    Sent from my iPhone

                    On May 25, 2015, at 3:26 PM, Matthew Lohbihler

                    <[email protected]>  
<mailto:[email protected]>

                    wrote:

                    You lost me. You seem to be working with definitions of

                    "observation" and "space for thinking" that i'm unaware of.

                    On 5/25/2015 4:14 PM, David Ray wrote:

                    Matthew L.,

                    It isn't a thought. It is there before observation or 
thoughts or

                    thinking. It actually is the space for thinking to occur - 
it is the

                    context that allows for thought. We bring it to the table - 
it is

                    there before we are (ontologically speaking). (It being 
this sense

                    of integrity/wholeness)

                    Sent from my iPhone

                    On May 25, 2015, at 2:59 PM, Matthew Lohbihler

                    <[email protected]>  
<mailto:[email protected]>

                    wrote:

                    Goodness. I thought we agreed that an AGI would not think 
like humans.

                    And besides, "love" doesn't feel like something i want to 
depend on

                    as obvious in a machine.

                    On 5/25/2015 3:50 PM, David Ray wrote:

                    If I can take this conversation into yet a different 
direction.

                    I think we've all been dancing around The question of what 
belies

                    the generation of morality or how will an AI derive its 
sense of

                    ethics? Of course initially there will be those parameters 
that are

                    programmed in - but eventually those will be gotten around.

                    There has been a lot of research into this actually - 
though it's

                    not common knowledge it is however knowledge developed over 
the

                    observation of millions of people.

                    The universe and all beings along the gradient of sentience 
observe

                    (albeit perhaps unconsciously), a sense of what I will call

                    integrity or "wholeness". We'd like to think that mankind 
steered

                    itself through the ages toward notions of gentility and 
societal

                    sophistication; but it didn't really. The idea that a group 
or

                    different groups devised a grand plan to have it turn out 
this way is totally preposterous.

                    What is more likely is that there is a natural order to 
things and

                    that is motion toward what works for the whole. I can't 
prove any of

                    this but internally we all know when it's missing or when 
we are not

                    in alignment with it. This ineffable sense is what love is 
- it's concern for the whole.

                    So I say that any truly intelligent being, by virtue of 
existing in

                    a substrate of integrity will have this built in and a super

                    intelligent being will understand this - and that is 
ultimately the

                    best chance for any single instance to survive is for the 
whole to survive.

                    Yes I know immediately people want to cite all the 
aberrations and

                    of course yes there are aberrations just as there are 
mutations but

                    those aberrations our reactions to how a person is shown 
love during

                    their development.

                    Like I said I can't prove any of this but eventually it 
will bear

                    itself out and we will find it to be so in the future.

                    You can be skeptical if you want to but ask yourself some 
questions.

                    Why is it that we all know when it's missing

                    (fairness/justice/integrity)? Why is it that we develop 
open source

                    software and free software? Why is it that despite our 
greed and

                    insecurity society moves toward freedom and equality for 
everyone?

                    One more question. Why is it that the most advanced 
philosophical

                    beliefs cite that where we are located as a 
phenomenological event,

                    is not in separate bodies?

                    I know this kind of talk doesn't go over well in this crowd 
of

                    concrete thinkers but I know that there is some science 
somewhere that backs this up.

                    Sent from my iPhone

                    On May 25, 2015, at 2:12 PM, vlab<[email protected]>  
<mailto:[email protected]>  wrote:

                    Small point: Even if they did decide that our diverse 
intelligence

                    is worth keeping around (having not already mapped it into 
silicon)

                    why would they need all of us.  Surely 10% of the 
population would

                    give them enough 'sample size' to get their diversity 
ration, heck maybe 1/10 of 1% would be

                    enough.   They may find that we are wasting away the planet 
(oh, not maybe,

                    we are) and the planet would be more efficient and they 
could have

                    more energy without most of us.  (Unless we become 'copper 
tops' as

                    in the Matrix movie).

                    On 5/25/2015 2:40 PM, Fergal Byrne wrote:

                    Matthew,

                    You touch upon the right point. Intelligence which can 
self-improve

                    could only come about by having an appreciation for 
intelligence, so

                    it's not going to be interested in destroying diverse 
sources of

                    intelligence. We represent a crap kind of intelligence to 
such an AI

                    in a certain sense, but one which it itself would rather 
communicate

                    with than condemn its offspring to have to live like. If 
these

                    things appear (which looks inevitable) and then they kill 
us, many

                    of them will look back at us as a kind of "lost 
civilisation" which they'll struggle to reconstruct.

                    The nice thing is that they'll always be able to rebuild us 
from the

                    human genome. It's just a file of numbers after all.

                    So, we have these huge threats to humanity. The AGI future 
is the

                    only reversible one.

                    Regards

                    Fergal Byrne

                    --

                    Fergal Byrne, Brenter IT

                    Author, Real Machine Intelligence with Clortex and NuPIC

                    https://leanpub.com/realsmartmachines

                    Speaking on Clortex and HTM/CLA at euroClojure Krakow, June 
2014:

                    http://euroclojure.com/2014/

                    and at LambdaJam Chicago, July 2014:http://www.lambdajam.com

                    http://inbits.com  - Better Living through Thoughtful 
Technology

                    http://ie.linkedin.com/in/fergbyrne/  -

                    https://github.com/fergalbyrne

                    e:[email protected]  
<mailto:e:[email protected]>  t:+353 83 4214179 Join the quest for

                    Machine Intelligence athttp://numenta.org  Formerly of Adnet

                    [email protected]  <mailto:[email protected]>  
http://www.adnet.ie

                    On Mon, May 25, 2015 at 7:27 PM, Matthew Lohbihler

                    <[email protected]>  
<mailto:[email protected]>  wrote:

                        I think Jeff underplays a couple of points, the main 
one being the

                        speed at which an AGI can learn. Yes, there is a 
natural limit to

                        how much experimentation in the real world can be done 
in a given

                        amount of time. But we humans are already going beyond 
this with,

                        for example, protein folding simulations, which speeds 
up the

                        discovery of new drugs and such by many orders of 
magnitude. Any

                        sufficiently detailed simulation could massively narrow 
down the

                        amount of real world verification necessary, such that 
new

                        discoveries happen more and more quickly, possibly at 
some point

                        faster than we know the AGI is doing them. An 
intelligence

                        explosion is not a remote possibility. The major risk 
here is what Eliezer Yudkowsky pointed out: not that the AGI is evil or 
something, but that it is indifferent to humanity.

                        No one yet goes out of their way to make any form of AI 
care about

                        us (because we don't yet know how). What if an AI 
created

                        self-replicating nanobots just to prove a hypothesis?

                        I think Nick Bostrom's book is what got Stephen, Elon, 
and Bill all

                        upset. I have to say it starts out merely interesting, 
but gets to

                        a dark place pretty quickly. But he goes too far in the 
other

                        direction, at the same time easily accepting that 
superinteligences

                        have all manner of cognitive skill, but at the same 
time can't

                        fathom the how humans might not like the idea of having 
our brain's

                        pleasure centers constantly poked, turning us all into 
smiling idiots (as i mentioned here:

                        http://blog.serotoninsoftware.com/so-smart-its-stupid).

                        On 5/25/2015 2:01 PM, Fergal Byrne wrote:

                        Just one last idea in this. One thing that crops up 
every now and

                        again in the Culture novels is the response of the 
Culture to

                        Swarms, which are self-replicating viral machines or 
organisms.

                        Once these things start consuming everything else, the 
AIs (mainly

                        Ships and Hubs) respond by treating the swarms as a 
threat to the

                        diversity of their Culture. They first try to 
negotiate, then

                        they'll eradicate. If they can contain them, they'll do 
that.

                        They do this even though they can themselves withdraw 
from real

                        spacetime. They don't have to worry about their own 
survival. They

                        do this simply because life is more interesting when it 
includes all the rest of us.

                        Regards

                        Fergal Byrne

                        --

                        Fergal Byrne, Brenter IT

                        Author, Real Machine Intelligence with Clortex and NuPIC

                        https://leanpub.com/realsmartmachines

                        Speaking on Clortex and HTM/CLA at euroClojure Krakow, 
June 2014:

                        http://euroclojure.com/2014/

                        and at LambdaJam Chicago, July 
2014:http://www.lambdajam.com

                        http://inbits.com  - Better Living through Thoughtful 
Technology

                        http://ie.linkedin.com/in/fergbyrne/  -

                        https://github.com/fergalbyrne

                        e:[email protected]  
<mailto:e:[email protected]>  t:+353 83 4214179 Join the quest for

                        Machine Intelligence athttp://numenta.org  Formerly of 
Adnet

                        [email protected]  <mailto:[email protected]>  
http://www.adnet.ie

                        On Mon, May 25, 2015 at 5:04 PM, cogmission (David Ray)

                        <[email protected]>  
<mailto:[email protected]>  wrote:

                            This was someone's response to Jeff's interview 
(see here:

                            
https://www.facebook.com/fareedzakaria/posts/10152703985901330)

                            Please read and comment if you feel the need...

                            Cheers,

                            David

                            --

                            With kind regards,

                            David Ray

                            Java Solutions Architect

                            Cortical.io

                            Sponsor of:  HTM.java

                            [email protected]  <mailto:[email protected]>

                            http://cortical.io

                --

                With kind regards,

                David Ray

                Java Solutions Architect

                Cortical.io

                Sponsor of:  HTM.java

                [email protected]  <mailto:[email protected]>

                http://cortical.io

            --

            With kind regards,

            David Ray

            Java Solutions Architect

            Cortical.io

            Sponsor of:  HTM.java

            [email protected]  <mailto:[email protected]>

            http://cortical.io


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