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AI Synthesis of Memory

Fragments During Human


Brain Download to Computer
Considered
In the foreseeable future, it's been hypothesized that individuals will have a way to

upload their brain to a pc substrate. Quite simply you will have the ability to back up

your brain, or just in case the human body fails, you can live in digital eternity within

some type of computer while enjoying consciousness, albeit without your organic body.

However, the technological challenges to upload a whole human brain may appear

almost insurmountable at least with this presence scientific biological and computational

abilities. Okay so, let's discuss this for second shall we?

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Now then, I have a concern for all your futurists at the Singularity Institute which were

talking about this, and writing research papers on it. It would appear nearly impossible

to acquire a perfect upload of an individual brain and memory into a secondary

substrate, and you will see fragments of memory which are lost. Nevertheless, maybe

we have to consider developing a synthetic intelligent synthesis of these memory

fragments. How might I start this you ask?

Well, from a philosophical standpoint and by cross pollinating several other ideas,

perhaps it may be feasible to use a number of the tricks that Google is using because it

scans dozens of old books in the Oxford Library. You see, sometimes the words don't
turn out right, and therefore, someone must go and look at them, utilising the human

mind to find out what those words in the sentence which didn't emerge correctly mean

or what exactly they are.

One of the ways that Google went and done this is to use those poorly scanned words

as "captcha codes" and after so lots of people look at them, and figure out what they

are, then an artificial intelligent computer can make a probability guess. It would appear

in my experience that memory fragments could be put back together in an identical

fashion, because humans generally discover how their brains work, and although every

brain is formatted slightly differently, most brains of a particular culture have similar

thoughts and experiences.

What I'm suggesting may be the "gamification" of memory fragments using artificial

intelligent synthesis to put that information back place, for use by the digital brain which

lost that little bit of information, or which was not translated correctly when it had been

uploaded to the substrate. Could this work you ask? I do believe so, and I think this

might function as the answer. We are likely to have to resolve this problem, and we are

certain to get memory fragments, but over time we are able to better place these

memory fragments centered on an incredible number of uploads, and gamification

strategies. Indeed I really hope you will please contemplate all this.

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