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Blog
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Neural Correlates of Consciousness
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Written by Raúl Arrabales Moreno
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Monday, 18 August 2008 |
Experiments in Consciousness
This is a UCTV (University of California Television) video where the Nobel Laureate Francis Crick explains his and Kristof Koch ideas about the Neural Correlates of Consciousness and related experiments.
The video belongs to the series Frontiers of Knowledge - Presentations by Faculty and Guests of the University of Califiornia, San Diego. The title is:
Consciousness: New Ideas and Experiments.
Presented by Francis Crick, Ph.D.
The Salk Institute for Biological Studies Nobel Laureate, 1962.
In this one hour talk, Crick offers an introduction to the concept of Neural Correlates of Consciousness (NCC), discussing the possition that himself and Koch took in their research and describing some of the more popular experiments in neuroscience about consciousness.
I think this video is interesting for anyone working in machine consciousness as Crick also covers (briefly) other important aspects as meaning, attention, and even other cognitive theories of consciousness.
Some experiments and syndromes commented in the video are bi-stable figures (like the Necker Cube and the Rubin Vase), waterfall effect, binocular rivalry, lateral neglect, fading of visual images, blindsight, etc.
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Last Updated ( Monday, 18 August 2008 )
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Conferences
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Written by Raúl Arrabales Moreno
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Thursday, 19 June 2008 |
13th Finnish Artificial Intelligence Conference and Nokia Workshop on Machine Consciousness
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STeP 2008 is the 13th Finnish Artificial Intelligence Conference and will be held in the Helsinki University of Technology and Nokia Research Center, Finland, on August 20-22. The first day consists of conference talks, and the second and third day are for the Nokia Workshop on Machine Consciousness.
The conference will be co-organized by the Finnish Artificial Intelligence Society and by the Helsinki University of Technology.
The planned program of the conference is as follows: |


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Last Updated ( Monday, 07 July 2008 )
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Interviews and Lectures
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Written by Raúl Arrabales Moreno
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Tuesday, 10 June 2008 |
We will create conscious machines in the future.
Interview with the Nobel Laureate Gerald Edelman.
Source: El Mundo Digital [1].
 Gerald Edelman Gerald Edelman received the Nobel Prize in medicine in 1972, when he was 43. He discovered the structure of antibodies, a crucial finding for the study of multiple infectious diseases and the development of effective vaccines. Shortly after that, he lost interest in immunology and focused on one of the big questions: how the brain works?
In the last two decades Edelman has become one of the most respectable researchers in the field of neurology, and he has founded a research institute in San Diego where he leads a reduced team of young scientists whose goal is to solve the mystery of consciousness. This week Edelman has visited Valencia (Spain) to participate in Jaime I prizes as judge. The following is a transcription and translation of an interview with Gerald Edelman published in Spanish by elmundo.es:
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 10 June 2008 )
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Books on Consciousness or Artificial Consciousness
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Written by Raúl Arrabales Moreno
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Thursday, 08 May 2008 |
Searching for Spirit.
Searching for Truth about Mind and Morality.
Where IS your mind? Is your mind located somewhere in your brain? Does your brain create your mind? If the answer to these questions is yes, the belief held by many religions that there is life after death is false. If the answer to these questions is yes, then morality is a product of the functioning of a brain, and the belief that there is an absolute morality is false.
Searching for Spirit is a quest to discover the true nature of both mind and morality written by C.R. Lind.
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 08 May 2008 )
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Robotics Studio News
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Written by Raúl Arrabales Moreno
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Friday, 25 April 2008 |
 RoboChamps Microsoft have recently launched the RoboChamps simulation robotics competition and portal.
The Robochamps.com portal supports the league competitions with training, access to software, and community features. Robochamps is based on simulation, therefore you don't need any real robotics hardware in order to compete. The idea is that you can start programming robots simply using the Microsoft Developer Studio 2008 and Visual Studio.
As the competition is based on MRDS 2008 and its simulation capabilities you can use any .NET language to program your simulated robot. The good thing is that you could use exactly the same code to control a real physical robot. Anyhow, the great advantage of this software simulated competition is that you are provided with rich simulation environments. Usually, it is really hard to build an scenario like that in the real world, so using these simulation environment allow us to test and train our robot controllers in nearly real world situations. Imagine controlling your rescue robot in a city that has just suffer a natural dissaster or a terrorist attack, or let your autonomous car drive under intense traffic conditions... or the much more relaxing exploration of the surface of Mars. These are some of the challenges proposed in RoboChamps.
Each challenge consist of a 3D simulation environment, a robots, a chanllenge scenario, and a set of rules for completing the scenario. Also, a referee service will monitor your control service, ensuring that the rules are followed, and determining your score and submitting it to RoboChamps.com.
The available RoboChamp challenges are:
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AMAZED CHALLENGE : Use your sensors to avoid traps and other surprises as you navigate the twists and turns of Amazed.
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MARS ROVER: CHALLENGE: Next Stop, Mars! Navigate the terrain of the red planet and collect data for analysis back on Earth. 
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URBAN CHALLENGE: Do you hate driving downtown? What if you could program a car to do the driving itself? Now you can.
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SEARCH & RESCUE CHALLENGE: Ready to be a hero? Scour thought the post-disaster rubble to find and rescue survivors in this challenge.
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SUMO CHALLENGE: Two robots. One ring. It's sumo time! Outmaneuver your opponent and push it out of the ring to reign victorious.
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TOURNAMENT: Are you the best of the best? Take to the field with your robot and your best code to compete head to head against fellow leaguers.
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Last Updated ( Monday, 28 April 2008 )
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