How the Brain might use Division

11 Mar 2020  ·  Kieran Greer ·

One of the most fundamental questions in Biology or Artificial Intelligence is how the human brain performs mathematical functions. How does a neural architecture that may organise itself mostly through statistics, know what to do? One possibility is to extract the problem to something more abstract. This becomes clear when thinking about how the brain handles large numbers, for example to the power of something, when simply summing to an answer is not feasible. In this paper, the author suggests that the maths question can be answered more easily if the problem is changed into one of symbol manipulation and not just number counting. If symbols can be compared and manipulated, maybe without understanding completely what they are, then the mathematical operations become relative and some of them might even be rote learned. The proposed system may also be suggested as an alternative to the traditional computer binary system. Any of the actual maths still breaks down into binary operations, while a more symbolic level above that can manipulate the numbers and reduce the problem size, thus making the binary operations simpler. An interesting result of looking at this is the possibility of a new fractal equation resulting from division, that can be used as a measure of good fit and would help the brain decide how to solve something through self-replacement and a comparison with this good fit.

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