Genre
- Journal Article
Geometrical constraints limit how much information can be received and emitted along real pathways across the boundary of any processor. Applied to central nervous systems this imposes a seemingly impassable bottleneck to the evolution of large brains. A small brain could never access enough information to warrant a larger brain. A small brain could not send enough information to operate a large body. Larger bodies are needed to support larger brains. Thus, with a rare exception, there are no invertebrates with large brains or large bodies. It is proposed that a convergent-divergent scanning neural network developed which enabled vertebrates to squeeze more information through this bottleneck by "spatial multiplexing". This reduces the number of pathways into, between and from processors by a factor of 16 while maintaining spatial and intensity accuracy. This paper describes spatial multiplexing using downloadable spreadsheet models and shows how the necessity of scanning likely introduced brain rhythms.
Supplement: Archive: sites/vre2.upei.ca.scholartest/files/temp/spatial_multiplexing-1.zip, Length Date Time Name, -------- ---- ---- ----, 0 09-30-14 13:05 spatial_multiplexing-1/, 32768 06-16-14 08:56 spatial_multiplexing-1/LinC-D2to1
Language
- English