"...later, if the rodent reenters that place, the cell will fire"
Totally fair and normal of course I just had been imagining human or generic neurons/dendrites up to that point. The test species wasn't mentioned earlier as far as I can see!
> In 2014, when Magee attached electrodes to rodents to record their neural activity,
If that becomes the case, then similarly built humanoid robots might have differentiated capabilities depending on their experience, just like us.
I don't think that much of AI today is obvious, so I'm suspicious of anything that is "obvious" about the future.
But it also hallucinates thoughts and beliefs too, and that’s where the conscious parts have to intervene.
But the conscious parts are expensive to run and I can’t multi-task that.
The conscious parts also degrade first when I don’t get enough sleep.
Did it truly take someone else to externalize the mechanics of cognition into a machine for you, for you to become able to notice them and become interested in them?
And then to remain focused on the machine that you see, rather than the machine that you are.
Pitiful.