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Brain enlightens the origin of human hand's skill by Staff Writers Daegu, South Korea (SPX) Nov 12, 2019
DGIST announced that Dr. Jinung An, Principal Research Scientist in Convergence Research Institute, found clues to explain the origin of 'human hand motor skill.' According to the Dr. An, We, humans, who have evolved from Homo habilis ('handy man'), have developed art, science, and technology. This is due to the ability to manipulate hands, one of the innate talents that human has as well as language. Nevertheless, scientific exploration of the origin of the human hand's skill to manipulate is still ongoing. He and his colleagues (Dr. Seung Hyun Lee and Mr. Sang Hyeon Jin) began to explore the human brain's motor pathway with a lamp called fNIRS to find it. Fifteen right-handed men performed sophisticated and complex hand movements (pinch grasping almonds with steel chopsticks and moving them precisely into the target) alternately between right and left hands. Simultaneously, they observed by fNIRS how the motor pathways of the cerebral cortex differ from one another. They discovered that dominant right hand manipulation turned on contralateral cortical motor pathway accurately. Non-dominant left hand manipulation, on the other hand, activated contralateral cortical motor pathway with the help of ipsilateral cortical motor pathway. This results significantly suggested that when manipulating with non-dominant left-hand, brain regions corresponding to the inborn dominant right hand functioned to help learn motor manipulation. Dr. An talked. In the early 20th century, Claude Levi-Strauss declared that human is a 'Locuteur (Speaker)' rather than a man's maker of machines. He emphasized language as a natural heritage of humankind. In contrast, Henri Bergson earlier defined human intelligence as the "faculty to create artificial objects, in particular tools to make tools, and to indefinitely variate its makings" in his great book, "Creative Evolution, 1907." Influenced by his philosophical idea, Max Frisch published a novel "Homo Faber (Man the Maker)" tells that human beings are able to control their fate and their environment as a result of the use of tools. Dr. An strongly insisted that both language and ability to use tools are inherent talents of human beings, and we can develop new motor artificial intelligence by simulating human ability to use tools just as we have developed the artificial intelligence of natural language processing by simulating the structure of human language.
How human population came from our ability to cooperate Chicago IL (SPX) Nov 07, 2019 Humans may owe their place as Earth's dominating species to their ability to share and cooperate with each other, according to a new study published in the Journal of Anthropological Research. In "How There Got to Be So Many of Us: The Evolutionary Story of Population Growth and a Life History of Cooperation," Karen L. Kramer explores the deep past to discover the biological and social underpinnings that allowed humans to excel as reproducers and survivors. She argues that the human tendency to be ... read more
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