April 2026
461 pages
17h 56m
English
In the 1950s, computer technology developed further, making it possible to simulate neural networks.
In 1951, Marvin Minsky and Dean Edmonds, motivated by the work of McCulloch and Pitts, used vacuum tubes and motors to build the first hardware-based neural network (SNARC – Stochastic Neural Analog Reinforcement Calculator), which simulated a rat finding its way through a maze. They used 40 randomly connected Hebbian synapses, which have a memory that stores the probability value for the arrival of a signal via an input and the departure of a signal via the output. The learning or rewarding of the network is carried out manually by a human operator.
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