The Brain vs. The Computer
Throughout
history, people have compared the brain to different inventions. In the past,
the brain has been said to be like a water clock and a telephone switchboard.
These days, the favorite invention that the brain is compared to is a computer.
Some people use this comparison to say that the computer is better than the
brain; some people say that the comparison shows that the brain is better than
the computer. Perhaps, it is best to say that the brain is better at doing some
jobs and the computer is better at doing other jobs.
Let's
see how the brain and the computer are similar and different.
The Brain vs. The Computer: Similarities and Differences
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The brain uses
chemicals to transmit information; the computer uses electricity. Even though
electrical signals travel at high speeds in the nervous system, they
travel even faster through the wires in a computer.
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A computer uses
switches that are either on or off ("binary"). In a way, neurons in
the brain are either on or off by either firing an action
potential or not firing an action potential. However, neurons are more
than just on or off because the "excitability" of a neuron is
always changing. This is because a neuron is constantly getting information
from other cells through synaptic contacts. Information traveling across a
synapse does NOT always result in a action potential. Rather, this
information alters the chance that an action potential will be produced by
raising or lowering the threshold of the neuron.
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Computer memory grows by adding computer chips. Memories in the
brain grow by stronger synaptic connections.
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It is much
easier and faster for the brain to learn new things. Yet, the computer can do
many complex tasks at the same time ("multitasking") that are
difficult for the brain. For example, try counting backwards and multiplying
2 numbers at the same time. However, the brain also does some multitasking
using the autonomic nervous system. For example, the brain controls
breathing, heart rate and blood pressure at the same time it performs a
mental task.
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The human brain has weighed in at about 3 pounds for about the
last 100,000 years. Computers have evolved much faster than the human brain.
Computers have been around for only a few decades, yet rapid technological
advancements have made computers faster, smaller and more powerful.
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The brain needs nutrients like oxygen and sugar for power; the
computer needs electricity to keep working.
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It is easier to fix a computer - just get new parts. There are
no new or used parts for the brain. However, some work is being done with
transplantation of nerve cells for certain neurological disorders such as
Parkinson's disease. Both a computer and a brain can get "sick" - a
computer can get a "virus" and there are many diseases that affect
the brain. The brain has "built-in back up systems" in some cases.
If one pathway in the brain is damaged, there is often another pathway that
will take over this function of the damaged pathway.
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The brain is always changing and being modified. There is no
"off" for the brain - even when an animal is sleeping, its brain is
still active and working. The computer only changes when new hardware or
software is added or something is saved in memory. There IS an
"off" for a computer. When the power to a computer is turned off,
signals are not transmitted.
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The computer is faster at doing logical things and computations.
However, the brain is better at interpreting the outside world and coming up
with new ideas. The brain is capable of imagination.
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Scientists understand how computers work. There are thousands of
neuroscientists studying the brain. Nevertheless, there is still much more to
learn about the brain. "There is more we do NOT know about the
brain, than what we do know about the brain"
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