http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4y43qwS8fl4
This is easily the most astounding presentation on artificial intelligence that I’ve ever seen or read before. Ten minutes into it I was already starting to rethink my entire approach to the field, and it just kept getting more and more interesting from there.
Jeff Hawkins’ talk starts out by describing what our brains really do and how they do it, and goes on to describe the mathematical models arising from those theories, the real world high value applications they have already implemented using this knowledge, and where they are headed in the future.
ABSTRACT
The neocortex works on principles that are fundamentally different than traditional computers. In this talk I will describe recent advances in understanding the neocortex and how we are applying them to model millions of high velocity data streams.
The talk will start with a description of sparse distributed representations, which are the fundamental units of information in brains. I will then discuss how these representations are learned and how the brain processes them to build predictive models from sensory data. Numenta has built a product called Grok that emulates these capabilities of the neocortex. Grok is being used to understand high velocity machine generated data in many different domains. I will give a brief introduction to Grok and speculate on the future of machine intelligence.