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The Forgetting Machine
The Forgetting Machine: Memory, Perception, and the "Jennifer Aniston Neuron" | Rodrigo Quian Quiroga
2 posts | 5 read | 1 to read
If we lose our memories, are we still ourselves? Is identity merely a collection of electrical impulses? What separates us from animals, or from computers? From Plato to Westworld, these questions have fascinated and befuddled philosophers, artists, and scientists for centuries. In The Forgetting Machine, neuroscientist Rodrigo Quiroga explains how the mechanics of memory illuminates these discussions, with implications for everything from understanding Alzheimer?s disease to the technology of Artificial Intelligence. You?ll also learn about the research behind what Quiroga coined ?Jennifer Aniston Neurons??cells in the human brain that are responsible for representing specific concepts, such as recognizing a certain celebrity?s face. The discovery of these neurons opens new windows into the workings of human memory. In this accessible, fascinating look at the science of remembering, you?ll learn how we turn perceptions into memories, how language shapes our experiences, and the crucial role forgetting plays in human recollection. You?ll see how electricity, chemistry, and abstraction combine to form something more than the human brain?the human mind. And you?ll gain surprising insight into what our brains can tell us about who we are. The Forgetting Machine takes us on a journey through science and science fiction, philosophy and identity, using what we know about how we remember (and forget) to explore the very roots of what makes us human.
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review
RamsFan1963
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Panpan

Boring and tedious. I wish I could forget the time I wasted listening to this book. Too much detail for such a short audiobook. Also, the narrator's rapid fire reading style did not help me in comprehending the data. 1 💥

review
Hamlet
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Pickpick

This is a fascinating and readable account of how the brain works. We perceive an amazingly small area of focus with our eyes, as one example, and the brain creates a representation of the image using judgment & inference; we “see” with our brains, and that ability to select only key information, actually makes our brains (in many ways) much more powerful than computers. This is an enjoyable read, with movie examples & a light touch in its prose.

5 likes1 stack add