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Dharmendra S. Modha is an Indian American manager and lead researcher of the Cognitive Computing group at IBM Almaden Research Center. He is known for his pioneering works in Artificial Intelligence and Mind Simulation. In November 2009, Modha announced at a supercomputing conference that his team had written a program that simulated a cat brain. He is the recipient of multiple honors, including the Gordon Bell Prize, given each year to recognize outstanding achievement in high-performance computing applications. In November 2012, Modha announced on his blog that using 96 Blue Gene/Q racks of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Sequoia supercomputer (1,572,864 processor cores, 1.5 PB memory, 98,304 MPI processes, and 6,291,456 threads), a combined IBM and LBNL team achieved an unpre

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  • Dharmendra Modha (en)
  • Dharmendra Modha (de)
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  • Dharmendra S. Modha (* 1969) ist Manager für Rechnerkognition (cognitive computing) am IBM Almaden Research Center. Außerdem lehrt er an der University of California, Berkeley. Er hat die funktionalen Elemente des Gehirns einer Maus – allerdings 10-mal langsamer – im Computer simuliert und angekündigt, bis 2018 ein menschliches Gehirn mit natürlicher Geschwindigkeit der Denkprozesse nachzubauen ("re-create"). (de)
  • Dharmendra S. Modha is an Indian American manager and lead researcher of the Cognitive Computing group at IBM Almaden Research Center. He is known for his pioneering works in Artificial Intelligence and Mind Simulation. In November 2009, Modha announced at a supercomputing conference that his team had written a program that simulated a cat brain. He is the recipient of multiple honors, including the Gordon Bell Prize, given each year to recognize outstanding achievement in high-performance computing applications. In November 2012, Modha announced on his blog that using 96 Blue Gene/Q racks of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Sequoia supercomputer (1,572,864 processor cores, 1.5 PB memory, 98,304 MPI processes, and 6,291,456 threads), a combined IBM and LBNL team achieved an unpre (en)
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  • Dharmendra Modha (en)
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  • Dharmendra S. Modha (* 1969) ist Manager für Rechnerkognition (cognitive computing) am IBM Almaden Research Center. Außerdem lehrt er an der University of California, Berkeley. Er hat die funktionalen Elemente des Gehirns einer Maus – allerdings 10-mal langsamer – im Computer simuliert und angekündigt, bis 2018 ein menschliches Gehirn mit natürlicher Geschwindigkeit der Denkprozesse nachzubauen ("re-create"). (de)
  • Dharmendra S. Modha is an Indian American manager and lead researcher of the Cognitive Computing group at IBM Almaden Research Center. He is known for his pioneering works in Artificial Intelligence and Mind Simulation. In November 2009, Modha announced at a supercomputing conference that his team had written a program that simulated a cat brain. He is the recipient of multiple honors, including the Gordon Bell Prize, given each year to recognize outstanding achievement in high-performance computing applications. In November 2012, Modha announced on his blog that using 96 Blue Gene/Q racks of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Sequoia supercomputer (1,572,864 processor cores, 1.5 PB memory, 98,304 MPI processes, and 6,291,456 threads), a combined IBM and LBNL team achieved an unprecedented scale of 2.084 billion neurosynaptic cores containing 530 billion neurons and 137 trillion synapses running only 1542× slower than real time. In August 2014 a paper describing the TrueNorth Architecture, "the first-ever production-scale 'neuromorphic' computer chip designed to work more like a mammalian brain than" a processor was published in the journal Science. TrueNorth project culminated in a 64 million neuron system for running deep neural network applications. (en)
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  • Dharmendra Modha (en)
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