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How does your brain pick one word from 50,000 in 0.6 seconds?

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Dr. Jai Maharaj

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Nov 12, 2017, 12:23:37 PM11/12/17
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How does your brain pick one word from 50,000 in 0.6 seconds?

By Max Evans
BBC News
April 3, 2016

The average English-speaker has about 50,000 words in
their mind. But how do they find the right one in 600
milliseconds?

A Bangor University expert believes the constant battle
for prominence between words like "cat" and "dog" could
help to explain.

Dr Gary Oppenheim, of the university's Language
Production Lab, is working to reveal the "algorithms and
architectures" behind vocabulary.

So he has built a computer system which aims to mimic
human word production and "learns as it speaks".

Continues at:

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-wales-north-west-wales-35735472

Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti

http://bit.do/jaimaharaj

Colonel Edmund J. Burke

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Nov 12, 2017, 12:30:58 PM11/12/17
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On 11/12/2017 9:23 AM, Dr. Jai Maharaj wrote:
> How does your brain pick one word from 50,000 in 0.6 seconds?
>
> By Max Evans
> BBC News
> April 3, 2016
>
> The average English-speaker has about 50,000 words in
> their(sic) mind. But how do they find the right one in 600
> milliseconds?


You obviously don't speak or write English well. What are you anywho...a fucking subhuman from the Indian cuntinent?
LOL


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