Alright, not even sure the title is correct but I am going to ask away.
When a computer renders a game, and say it renders an arm and you see the edge of the arm, it is rendered or created in polygons and then turned into blocks/pixels. Correct me if this logic is incorrect please.
When the computer "comes up" with said image, does it "come up" with the image broken up into polygons/blocks/pixels? Or is the image "an arm" which is then cut into polygons/blocks/pixels?
Finally, was planning on tweeting this at Lex Fridman to see if he would help me out but I'll ask here anyway.
A- Do we know how the brains processing of images works?
B- If so, and assuming it is different to that of a computer, what is the fundamental difference and why can a computer not be built to draw imagery this way?
C- THE ACTUAL QUESTION (lolsadness.jpeg). Is the answer to question B like trying to answer the question of "How does the entire brain work?" and thus essentially unanswerable right now? Essentially being able to understand the entire brain in order to build a computer that could simply draw imagery in the same way.
When a computer renders a game, and say it renders an arm and you see the edge of the arm, it is rendered or created in polygons and then turned into blocks/pixels. Correct me if this logic is incorrect please.
When the computer "comes up" with said image, does it "come up" with the image broken up into polygons/blocks/pixels? Or is the image "an arm" which is then cut into polygons/blocks/pixels?
Finally, was planning on tweeting this at Lex Fridman to see if he would help me out but I'll ask here anyway.
A- Do we know how the brains processing of images works?
B- If so, and assuming it is different to that of a computer, what is the fundamental difference and why can a computer not be built to draw imagery this way?
C- THE ACTUAL QUESTION (lolsadness.jpeg). Is the answer to question B like trying to answer the question of "How does the entire brain work?" and thus essentially unanswerable right now? Essentially being able to understand the entire brain in order to build a computer that could simply draw imagery in the same way.