¾ One approach might be to start by listing all the functions the robot would have to
perform to behave like a human being. What’s wrong with this approach? 2pts
¾ Which subdivision of the human nervous system would be less important for a robot than
for a human being, and why? 2pts
¾ Assume that the robot’s brain will have the same parts that a human being’s brain does
(the pons, cerebellum, hippocampus, etc.). Which parts might you make smaller to save
space because they are less important for a robot than for a person? Explain. 3pts
¾ Which brain parts do you think would be especially important for a robot, and why? 3Pts
1. Look up the Turing test. That's your first signpost.
2. Computers are logic based, and unable to be emotion based, simply by nature of 1010- therefore all things are reduced to percentages and 'hard' decisions. 60% chance I'll need food in the next 3 hours, better eat. Ergo, it's very much based on the nature of the robotics in question. Naturally they won't need cerebellum, nor axons, as their motor skills will be fine-tuned on their own. Added to that, massive logic centers to replace the vastly atrophied emotion centers, as their emotions would be logic-based anyway (see p-zombies). So out goes the mendula oblongata.
3. I think I answered 2 as 3. So... Have fun with that. I guess robots would have some complicated stuff replacing grey/white matter. As our (human) spinal cords are made of grey matter (brain stuff) in order to assist in reflexes, Robots might need an alternative. Use a hot-plate scenario to explain this, to be boring and get A's.
4. On the assumption that we're using current computer code integrated into the capacities of a human brain, the left hemisphere is going to be very important, whilst the right will be rather atrophied. However, I haven't done much in-depth brain function other than where the loop of henle and the pre/post-central gyruses are.
So, here's my two years of health education, drunkeness and healthy curiosity help. Probably none, but damn it if you've actually gotten an interesting question which you aren't appreciating enough.