Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: Mday
There is a limit. And, no we cant find what the limit is.
That's a self-contradictory statement.
The brain, being a physical structure with a finite size and finite storage density, must have a limit to the amount of information you can store in it. I don't see why you couldn't make some educated guesses as to how much information that might be (sci-fi author Arthur C. Clarke estimated about a petabyte, FWIW). However, it would be very difficult to know if we were *right* with our current level of knowledge of neurological function, especially since it's very hard to see exactly how the information is stored (for instance, visual information is likely stored more as relations of shapes, rather than pixel-by-pixel as on a computer).
It's like counting the number of cells in your body. You can't.
Again, this statement seems awfully one-sided. It seems to me that if there are a finite number of cells in your body, you can at least get *close*.
Halbe: And how do you know when you've hit the limit?
That's an interesting question. In certain types of computer neural networks, if you oversaturate the network, it suddenly falls apart -- it becomes incapable of sorting out *any* of the information you've programmed into it. Others would simply start 'forgetting' data that hadn't been reinforced in a while. I'd have to guess that the human brain would fall more on the 'graceful degradation' side -- you'd likely start forgetting things that you hadn't used recently. But our capacity for information storage seems to be large enough that it is essentially impossible to use it all up within a lifetime.