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On Intelligence (Paperback)

~ (Author), (Author) "When I graduated from Cornell in June 1979 with a degree in electrical engineering, I didn't have any major plans for my life..." (more)
Key Phrases: cortical algorithm, next higher region, cortical hierarchy, Chinese Room, Gettysburg Address, Turing Test (more...)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (114 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Jeff Hawkins, the high-tech success story behind PalmPilots and the Redwood Neuroscience Institute, does a lot of thinking about thinking. In On Intelligence Hawkins juxtaposes his two loves--computers and brains--to examine the real future of artificial intelligence. In doing so, he unites two fields of study that have been moving uneasily toward one another for at least two decades. Most people think that computers are getting smarter, and that maybe someday, they'll be as smart as we humans are. But Hawkins explains why the way we build computers today won't take us down that path. He shows, using nicely accessible examples, that our brains are memory-driven systems that use our five senses and our perception of time, space, and consciousness in a way that's totally unlike the relatively simple structures of even the most complex computer chip. Readers who gobbled up Ray Kurzweil's (The Age of Spiritual Machines and Steven Johnson's Mind Wide Open will find more intriguing food for thought here. Hawkins does a good job of outlining current brain research for a general audience, and his enthusiasm for brains is surprisingly contagious. --Therese Littleton --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Publishers Weekly

Hawkins designed the technical innovations that make handheld computers like the Palm Pilot ubiquitous. But he also has a lifelong passion for the mysteries of the brain, and he's convinced that artificial intelligence theorists are misguided in focusing on the limits of computational power rather than on the nature of human thought. He "pops the hood" of the neocortex and carefully articulates a theory of consciousness and intelligence that offers radical options for future researchers. "[T]he ability to make predictions about the future... is the crux of intelligence," he argues. The predictions are based on accumulated memories, and Hawkins suggests that humanoid robotics, the attempt to build robots with humanlike bodies, will create machines that are more expensive and impractical than machines reproducing genuinely human-level processes such as complex-pattern analysis, which can be applied to speech recognition, weather analysis and smart cars. Hawkins presents his ideas, with help from New York Times science writer Blakeslee, in chatty, easy-to-grasp language that still respects the brain's technical complexity. He fully anticipates—even welcomes—the controversy he may provoke within the scientific community and admits that he might be wrong, even as he offers a checklist of potential discoveries that could prove him right. His engaging speculations are sure to win fans of authors like Steven Johnson and Daniel Dennett.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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28 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Intro to Even Greater Insights, February 18, 2005
This review is from: On Intelligence (Hardcover)
The accolades previous reviewers have lavished upon this book are all fully deserved. It is not, however, "the first time all these bits and pieces have been put into a coherent framework". The work of Stephen Grossberg explored all of these themes in the 1970s. Unfortunately Grossberg expressed his key insights in systems of differential difference equations that few could understand and fewer still could build upon or contribute to.
To his credit, Hawkins does cite Grossberg approvingly at several junctures in his argument, but he fails to take into account several of Grossberg's greatest insights into neocortical processing: his theory of how serial processing can be accomplised in a parallel anatomy and his theory of "rebounds". The latter is especially important since it explains how new memories are prevented from overwriting old memories. For example, when I learn a second language, it doesn't overwrite my first.

These criticisms, however, are in no way meant to detract in the slightest from Hawkins' superb book. It is an eminently readable account of neocortical computing, and correct in all its broad brush strokes. If you are as beguiled by "On Intelligence" as the other reviewers in this thread, my purpose is only to alert you to the even deeper wonders that are to be found in Grossberg's work. As I have said, his work is difficult, but his 1980 and 1982 Psychological Review articles will provide good entry-points. Those of you with an interest in brain and language will find an even better second course in neocortical computing in Loritz' "How the Brain Evolved Language" (Oxford University Press, 1999).
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121 of 140 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply Indispensable, October 8, 2004
By Bruce Gregory (Deep River, Connecticut) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
This review is from: On Intelligence (Hardcover)
It is not very often that you encounter a book that alters, not simply what you think, but how you look at the world. On Intelligence is such a book. Jeff Hawkins develops a perspective on intelligence that makes sense of much of what I have discovered about learning over the past twenty years. His focus is on a unified model of how the cortex works, but in truth you do not need to have deep interest in neurobiology to see the power of the model. The book is very clear and readable, something I have learned to associate with Sandra Blakeslee's deft touch (see, for example, Phantoms In the Brain, by Ramachandran and Blakeslee). The heavy lifting occurs in the lengthy sixth chapter, "How the Cortex Works." You might want to skim this chapter or even omit it entirely on your first reading. It is well written, but requires a very thoughtful reading. The model Hawkins develops in this chapter underpins his view of intelligence, but it is not necessary to grasp the details to appreciate the power of the vision. If you have the slightest interest in the role of the brain in making us who we are, you owe it to yourself to read this book. I couldn't recommend it more highly.
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28 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Central Dogma for the Brain, September 29, 2004
By Donald B. Siano (Westfield, NJ USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: On Intelligence (Hardcover)
Jeff Hawkins is the man who was the architect of the PalmPilot, the Treo, and invented Graffiti, an alphabet for inputing data to a computer with a stylus. But this book is about his other love, the deciphering of the code that makes the human brain work. There is nothing like a big, important puzzle to get the blood working, and mine was powerfully pulled along . With the human genome project's sequencing of human DNA nearly completed, understanding the brain has got to be the most important scientific undertaking one can think of. Hawkins easily persuades us that there is a burning need for a "top down" model for the brain that can play a role something analogous to the Central Dogma of molecular biology, which guides and organizes research, prioritizing the myriad of possible tasks into something like that required for the logistics of a conquering army's march through an alien land.

He also persuaded me that he has some important insights of that model that I found tantalizing, new and exciting. His central model concerns the role of the cortex in producing intelligence. He makes the case for a central dogma he calls "the memory-prediction framework." This idea says that the cortex is a machine for making predictions for temporal sensory patterns based on memories of past patterns. The prediction algorithm carried out in the cortex is the same for all of the senses of vision, touch, hearing, etc., which accounts for, among other things, the basic physiological uniformity of the cortex, and the plasticity of the brain in adapting to such problems as blindness or deafness.

He argues that since the "clock" of the brain operates at a tick-rate on the order of 5 milli-seconds, and most of the functions of the brain (e. g. recognizing that a picture of a cat shows a cat) are carried out in less than 100 ticks. From the time that light enters the eye, to the time it takes to signify recognition takes less than a second. A computer would take billions of instruction steps, and even the fastest parallel computer available would not do it in less than millions of steps. So the brain doesn't really "compute" the answer, it retrieves it from memory, which requires far fewer steps than the computation. Sounds good to me.

His explication of the memory-prediction framework is clear and accessible even to the uninitiated like me, though I found some of it in the middle pretty heavy going. But this is something like reading Watson and Crick's paper on the structure of DNA. The part about turning the diffraction diagram and other insights into a workable model was a little above my head, but I could still see the importance of the answer, and how it addressed the problem of replication and how it gave clues as to how to "read the genes." I can only grasp part of what Hawkins has done, and I can see that there is still a long way to go. But I can still jump up and down about it!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A New Way to Think About Intelligence
After listening to a podcast interview with Jeff Hawkins, I picked up this book because although I'm by no stretch of the imagination an AI expert, Hawkins' arguments regarding... Read more
Published 12 days ago by W. Jason Gilmore

4.0 out of 5 stars To the point
Jeff does an excellent job of helping you to visualize how his theories of the brain work in this book. Read more
Published 27 days ago by Paul Willworth

2.0 out of 5 stars Too Much of an Attack on AI
Mr. Hawkins has some interesting ideas, but I think the presentation of the ideas is seriously marred by the presentation as an attack on the areas of AI that Mr. Read more
Published 1 month ago by David S. Stewart

4.0 out of 5 stars Intelligence and its relation to prediction
This review will attempt to summarize the book and also provides my opinion on Jeff Hawkins's memory-prediction model of intelligence and his application to other human... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Vittal Mudrageda

5.0 out of 5 stars The brain as a "pattern device" that works through memory
"Prediction is not just one of the things your brain does. It is the primary function of the neocortex, and the foundation of intelligence." (p. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Dennis Littrell

4.0 out of 5 stars Intelligence and the Matter of Mind
Hawkins and his co-writer, Susan Blakeslee, offer an intriguing analysis of what the brain does to produce intelligence, a very sticky subject any way you cut it. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Stuart W. Mirsky

5.0 out of 5 stars Very approachable and inspiring
Great book, very well written and easy to follow even for people with no real prior scientific knowledge of how the brain works (that would be me :P). Read more
Published 2 months ago by Rich

5.0 out of 5 stars Really terrific
I've read dozens of popular books on neuroscience and the brain over the years, and this is hands-down the best one I've seen on a specific topic. Read more
Published 3 months ago by magellan

4.0 out of 5 stars On Intelligence: A Teacher's Review
Jonathan Hawkins's concern in "On Intelligence" is to outline a theory of what intelligence is that differs from ones floated around in various artificial intelligence (AI)... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Kevin Currie-Knight

4.0 out of 5 stars Landmark Book, but with a couple of rushed things
This book is a very interesting reading for everyone who wants to get a hold of a emerging framework for understanding intelligence, specially as a it emerges from a common... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Eduardo Bellani

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