手机APP下载

您现在的位置: 首页 > 在线广播 > 科学美国人 > 科学美国人科学系列 > 正文

科学美国人60秒:昆虫大脑系统知道你想要什么

来源:可可英语 编辑:aimee   可可英语APP下载 |  可可官方微信:ikekenet
 下载MP3到电脑  批量下载MP3和LRC到手机
加载中..
Ce5+Z%a%]L9;fqdynw

VYLqtZInjQRWQ#ks

This is Scientific American — 60-Second Science. I'm Christopher Intagliata.
The goal for a lot of tech companies today: figure out what you, their customer, want next, before you even ask. It's driven by something called similarity search.
"If you go to YouTube and you watch a video they're going to suggest similar videos to the one you're watching. That's similarity search. If you go to Amazon and look for similar products to the one you're going to buy, that's similarity search."
Saket Navlakha, a computer scientist at the Salk Institute. He says we do similarity searches, too, for example, when we scan faces in a crowd for the one we know. And even fruit files do a version, related to smell:
"So the fly is having to solve a similar problem, of kind of searching through its database of previous experiences and previous odors it has smelled, to determine what should be the most appropriate behavioral response to that odor."

5@Nz&zn2VyiMX

果蝇1.jpg
But flies tag incoming odors differently from the way modern search algorithms parse similarity. A small group of neurons makes an initial evaluation of the smell. Then a much larger set of neurons is activated to make a final decision about the smell. Rather than the way a computer similarity search does it, taking something with many dimensions, and simplifying it down to a few.
So Navlakha and his colleagues tweaked computer similarity search functions to do it fly style. And then pitted the fly-inspired algorithms against conventional ones. And the biologically inspired code won out, better at telling "like" from "unlike" on an image-similarity test.
"You know evolution figured it out, it figured out a very elegant solution to this very important problem." The report is in the journal Science.
Navlakha says he and his team are looking to partner with tech companies now, in hopes of endowing machines with the time-tested problem-solving abilities of the brain. Even if it's a fruit fly brain.
Thanks for listening for Scientific American — 60-Second Science. I'm Christopher Intagliata.

5Xf@yYaq))y=!

P^KCI^viHL~|Kzh(lOA

SKynPTm@by3!P)dp652Jf7|z4wfDwso](u5ZXaWFl],0bMM

重点单词   查看全部解释    
inspired [in'spaiəd]

想一想再看

adj. 有创见的,有灵感的

联想记忆
decision [di'siʒən]

想一想再看

n. 决定,决策

 
perseverance [.pə:si'viərəns]

想一想再看

n. 毅力,忍耐,不屈不挠

联想记忆
parse [pɑ:z]

想一想再看

v. & n. 从语法上分析

联想记忆
solve [sɔlv]

想一想再看

v. 解决,解答

 
solution [sə'lu:ʃən]

想一想再看

n. 解答,解决办法,溶解,溶液

联想记忆
conventional [kən'venʃənl]

想一想再看

adj. 传统的,惯例的,常规的

 
odor ['əudə]

想一想再看

n. 气味,名声,气息

 
code [kəud]

想一想再看

n. 码,密码,法规,准则
vt. 把 ...

 
partner ['pɑ:tnə]

想一想再看

n. 搭档,伙伴,合伙人
v. 同 ... 合

联想记忆

发布评论我来说2句

    最新文章

    可可英语官方微信(微信号:ikekenet)

    每天向大家推送短小精悍的英语学习资料.

    添加方式1.扫描上方可可官方微信二维码。
    添加方式2.搜索微信号ikekenet添加即可。