This book examines some of the underlying processes behind different forms of information management, including how we store information in our brains, the impact of new technologies such as computers and robots on our efficiency in storing information, and how information is stored in families and in society. The editors brought together experts from a variety of disciplines. While it is generally agreed that information reduces uncertainties and that the ability to store it safely is of vital importance, these authors are open to different meanings of “information”: computer science considers the bit as the information block; neuroscience emphasizes the importance of information as sensory inputs that are processed and transformed in the brain; theories in psychology focus more on individual learning and on the acquisition of knowledge; and finally sociology looks at how interpersonal processes within groups or society itself come to the fore. The book will be of value to researchers and students in the areas of information theory, artificial intelligence, and computational neuroscience.
Author(s): Cornelia S. Große, Rolf Drechsler
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: 246
Tags: Artificial Intelligence, Information Storage
Front Matter ....Pages i-xv
Information Processing and Storage in the Brain (Manfred Fahle)....Pages 1-39
Verbal Short-Term Memory: Insights in Human Information Storage (Michail D. Kozlov)....Pages 41-78
In-Memory Computing: The Integration of Storage and Processing (Saeideh Shirinzadeh, Rolf Drechsler)....Pages 79-110
Approximate Memory: Data Storage in the Context of Approximate Computing (Saman Froehlich, Daniel Große, Rolf Drechsler)....Pages 111-133
Information System for Storage, Management, and Usage for Embodied Intelligent Systems (Daniel Beßler, Asil Kaan Bozcuoğlu, Michael Beetz)....Pages 135-159
On “Storing Information” in Families: (Mediated) Family Memory at the Intersection of Individual and Collective Remembering (Rieke Böhling, Christine Lohmeier)....Pages 161-177
Cultural Memory and Screen Culture (Berber Hagedoorn)....Pages 179-197
The Complicated Preservation of the Television Heritage in a Digital Era (Leif Kramp)....Pages 199-238