Neuroscience and the path to True Artificial Intelligence

Alex Cox
3 min readNov 3, 2016

Today, computer-science (CS) is king. The best paying jobs and the best companies all revolve around CS. Our tools are getting smarter and easier to use with their learning curves getting shallower every year.

Making a website has never been easier with many online tools creating your online storefront is just a few clicks away now when it used to involve hiring a whole design and engineering team. Now, an algorithm can even design and create your website for you.

As we become better at creating, our machines become more adept at understanding.

Every year our artificial intelligent (AI) algorithms are getting significantly smarter. To continue this trend we will need a deeper understanding of our own brains.

Most of our AI algorithms, such as computer vision and natural language processing, are based on our brain’s circuitry. Machine vision uses overlapping field areas much like the brain’s visual cortex uses to asses the images on your retina.

Massive neuroscience projects such as the multi-billion dollar Human Connectome project, which aims to map the human brain’s connections, is of questionable worth to neuroscientists. But this connectome project is invaluable for computer scientists hoping to create silicon brain analogs.

Our best bet to make AI equal to or smarter than a human, true AI, is this human connectome neuroscientists are trying to generate.

In theory, once we have a map of the mind we could mimic its construction to make a new computer based on our brain. But just because we have the map does not mean we have all the pieces. The map’s completion will be akin to sequencing human DNA for the first time. Sequencing the DNA took fifteen years, but understanding it will take a century.

Similarly, for the connectome, once we have the map we will need to understand how each component of the circuit functions. Unlike transistors, neurons are not just on or off. They have many types of signaling depending on the cells and synapses. These various forms of signaling result in many different actions and effects. On top of the complicated electrical signaling there is the poorly studied glial cell chemical signaling. Needless to say, there is still much work to be done before we can hope to properly mimic a human brain in silicon, but the human connectome project is our first large step towards that ultimate goal.

Our AI algorithms will continue to get smarter and better, but without significant advances in our understanding of the brain we will be unlikely to attain true AI. Only with neuroscience and computer science working together can these large scale advances be made. Evolution has had million of years to perfect the circuitry so you can read this drivel. Now it’s our turn to translate that map to our silicon world and make the leap to true AI.

Alex Cox

Product Manager and designer writing about ideas. Living and working in SF. See more of my projects at www.alexcreates.me