The human brain is very powerful, but in the face of complex and changeable natural environment, many modules must be pre-installed to deal with it. As for how fast more complicated math problems are calculated, it has little effect on people's viability. However, after using up these computing resources by pre-installing these modules, the human brain still has a lot of remaining computing power, but it is far from being able to control it at will.
Therefore, people can try to accomplish some tasks well, but they are all the results of hard training. Because billions of years of biological evolution is not aimed at completing mathematical operations, the goal of these 654.38 billion neurons is to survive on the earth. It is obviously not helpful for this goal to complete the mathematical operation faster.
In recent years, computer technology has made rapid progress. At that time, the operation speed of Deep Blue was about 200 million times per second. At present, the computing speed of Tianhe II, the world's most powerful computer made in China, has reached 3.386 trillion times per second, which makes it possible for computers to beat the human brain. The wide application of cloud computing and big data makes the development of artificial intelligence even more powerful and makes dreams come true.
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In order to verify again who is better, the computer or the human brain, the Netfish E-sports Hall located in Gongti West Road, Beijing, has become a competition place for super brains in the black and white world, and the first Merlin Valley Cup World Computer Go Championship was held here.
Teams from China, South Korea, Japan, the United States, France and other nine countries and regions launched a fierce competition. Finally, the "Stone Cyclone" developed by Korean expert Lin Zaifan defeated Japanese "Zenith Go" in the final and won the computer competition.
However, in the "man-machine war", the computer is not "smart" on the black and white chessboard of 19-in the game between computer and human brain held on 15, the computer "stone whirlwind" challenged Lian Xiao, a famous chess champion in China. After the start of the competition, the layout of the "stone whirlwind" was particularly thick and was once in an advantage. Unexpectedly, I was shocked when I walked to the middle board.
In the end, the player won the game by 4 to 5, lost to the computer by 6, and won with a total score of 2 ∶/kloc-0 ∶. It seems that the computer Go program has defeated the road of mankind.
People's Network-When can computers beat the brain?