Artificial intelligence (AI) and neuroscience have a long history of working together. The daily social and economic activities are supported by artificial intelligence (AI), which is a significant piece of technology. One of today's most hotly disputed topics is artificial intelligence (AI), and there doesn't seem to be much agreement on how human and artificial intelligence vary and overlap. Discussions on a variety of relevant subjects, including ethics, healthcare, agriculture, education, and trustworthiness, are marked by implicit anthropocentric and anthropomorphic assumptions. It significantly supports Japan's economy's sustainable growth and provides solutions to a number of societal issues. AI has gained attention recently as a means of fostering growth in both industrialized nations like the United States and Europe as well as developing nations like China and India. Deep neural networks (DNNs), which have grown to be potent and common tools to simulate human cognition and frequently generate similar behaviours, can also be described as AI. DNNs appear to categories real-world images in the same way as people do, for instance, thanks to their hierarchical, brain-inspired organization of computations. Deep neural networks (DNNs), a subset of the larger machine learning family, are becoming more and more effective in commonplace real-world applications like automated face recognition and self-driving automobiles. The School of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of Glasgow has recently published new research in the journal Trends in Cognitive Sciences that takes an approach to understanding whether the human brain and its DNN models recognize things in the same way, using comparable steps of computation.
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Shailender Mishra
Sushmita Mishra
Roopam Tomar
Journal of Applied Pharmaceutical Sciences and Research
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Mishra et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68af6595ad7bf08b1eae52e2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.31069/japsr.v7i3.03
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