A study led by Marieke Mur, a neuroimaging expert at Western University, has found that while computers may be able to spot a familiar face or an oncoming vehicle faster than the human brain, their accuracy is questionable. This is because deep learning, a type of artificial intelligence that uses interconnected nodes or neurons in a layered structure that resembles the human brain, has yet to master human calculations and crucially, the communication and connection found between the body and the brain, specifically when it comes to visual recognition.
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