brains sets us apart from other species


Cradle of imagination in human brain found


WASHINGTON: Researchers have solved the long standing mystery of how and where imagination occurs in the human brain.

Philosophers and scientists have long puzzled over what makes humans able to create art, invent tools, think scientifically and perform other incredibly diverse behaviours.

Dartmouth College researchers found that the answer lies in a widespread neural network — the brain's "mental workspace" — that consciously manipulates images, symbols, ideas and theories and gives humans the laser-like mental focus needed to solve complex problems and come up with new ideas.

"Our findings move us closer to understanding how the organization of our brains sets us apart from other species and provides such a rich internal playground for us to think freely and creatively," said lead author Alex Schlegel.

"Understanding these differences will give us insight into where human creativity comes from and possibly allow us to recreate those same creative processes in machines," said Schlegel.

Scholars theorize that human imagination requires a widespread neural network in the brain, but evidence for such a "mental workspace" has been difficult to produce with techniques that mainly study brain activity in isolation.

Researchers addressed the issue by asking: How does the brain allow us to manipulate mental imagery? For instance, imagining a bumblebee with the head of a bull, a seemingly effortless task but one that requires the brain to construct a totally new image and make it appear in our mind's eye.

In the study, 15 participants were asked to imagine specific abstract visual shapes and then to mentally combine them into new more complex figures or to mentally dismantle them into their separate parts.

Researchers measured the participants' brain activity with functional MRI and found a cortical and subcortical network over a large part of the brain was responsible for their imagery manipulations.

The network closely resembles the "mental workspace" that scholars have theorized might be responsible for much of human conscious experience and for the flexible cognitive abilities that humans have evolved.

The study was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Soon, implantable electronic shrink wrap to heal human hearts


WASHINGTON: Researchers have revealed that laminating devices, which could enhance human health and performance by marrying electronics with the human body, onto tissues could help achieve natural motions, without mechanical constraint.

John A Rogers, PhD, of the departments of materials science, engineering, and chemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and editorial advisory board member for ACS Nano, talked about materials for a new generation of electronic devices that promise to revolutionize health care in the world of tomorrow, at the American Chemical Society meeting.

Rogers said that materials, mechanics designs and manufacturing systems are now available for electronic systems that achieve effective elastic moduli and bending stiffness's matched to the surfaces of major organs of the body, including the skin, the heart and the brain.

The researcher said that laminating such devices onto these tissues leads to conformal contact, and adequate adhesion based on van der Waals interactions alone, in a manner that can accommodate natural motions, without mechanical constraint.

The key aspects of this type of technology were highlighted, with an emphasis on the materials, the soft lithographic manufacturing methods and several examples of clinically relevant modes of use.

(ANTI HUMAN)humanoid' Eliza WILL INCREASE UNEMPLOYMENT ,WHILE INCREASING PROFIT

'Blond humanoid' Eliza might take over low-end BPO work

'Blond humanoid' Eliza might take over low-end BPO work
Eliza is IPsoft's virtual service desk employee, and is someone you can see on your computing screens when you interact with her
BANGALORE: Eliza is a blonde humanoid that can answer upto 1 lakh emails, and 67,000 phone calls every day. She (doesn't look nice calling her 'it' ) can even strike a conversation with you about, say, your favourite cappuccino, somewhat like Apple's Siri.

Eliza is IPsoft's virtual service desk employee, and is someone you can see on your computing screens when you interact with her. She handles the back office grunt work, interpreting voice inputs to investigate and diagnose IT incidents. Like IBM's Watson that beat humans in the game of Jeopardy, Eliza — the newest artificial intelligence sensation — is drawing attention from people around the world.

"When I met N R Narayana Murthy in New York recently, he told me he wants to have a date with Eliza the next time he's in the US. He can see better than most, the wave of cognitive and autonomic technologies that is about to sweep us," says Chetan Dube, a former math professor turned founder and CEO of New York-based IT autonomics service provider IPsoft.

Eliza, currently deployed in a few blue chip customers in the US, is taking over routine helpdesk tasks that were done previously by an army of engineers. The software algorithms sitting behind the computing system resolves business process queries without human intervention.

Automation is fundamentally changing the way IT and BPO services are being delivered. India's $20 billion BPO industry is increasingly deploying some form of automation to take over routine helpdesk tasks performed by offshore employees. Infosys BPO, for instance, has implemented automation solutions across different process areas - in traditional ones like accounts payable, order processing, payroll etc, and in newer ones like electronic discovery, trade promotion management, and master data management.

"It takes us three months to train a manual agent. But the machines will absorb standard operating procedures within seconds. And you would have created the most competent virtual help desk engineer. What is liberating is that the machines will be non-linearly scalable," says Dube.

Anantha Radhakrishnan, global head of enterprise services, transformation and technology services in Infosys BPO, says automation will delink the direct dependence of revenue growth on people addition as long as service providers move to transaction and outcome-based price models. "At another level, automation will help grow the BPM (business process management) market as it will enable business cases to become viable in new process areas and to become attractive for clients," he says.

Automation is challenging the conventional wage arbitrage model. Indian BPO companies employ a million people. They are moving up the value chain doing a complex repertoire of work, but the rise of machine intelligence and automation would upskill them to handle still higher tasks. "The last decade belonged to labour arbitrage. This decade will belong to labour automation. Analyst firm ISG did a study recently that found that the gains realized in IT outsourcing through labour automation are in the spectrum of 60-80 % as opposed to the conventional wage arbitrage, which is now hovering around 15-30%," says Dube.

Keshav Murugesh, group CEO of WNS, said automation would take over lower end tasks in the coming years. "There is research underway that will enable automation of some high end tasks to bring additional process efficiencies. Development of highly intuitive self-service applications could also reduce some type of volumes and increase efficiency in the days ahead," he said.