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A computer that thinks like a person has long been the dream of
computer designers. The author uses his 35 years of computer design
experience to describe the mechanisms of a thinking computer. These
mechanisms include recall, recognition, learning, doing procedures,
speech, vision, attention, intelligence, and consciousness.
Included are experiments that demonstate the mechanisms described.
The experiments use software that the reader can download from the
internet and run on his or her personal computer (PC). The software
includes a large engram file containing knowledge we use on a daily
basis. Additional experiments allow the reader to write and run new
engrams. The computer architecture of the human brain is first
described. Standard methods of computer design are next used to
convert the architecture into thinking computer implementations
spanning a range of performace levels. Lastly, the operation of a
thinking computer is presented.
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