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Who, when borrowing money, can pledge his name? Detailed answer

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Directory / Big encyclopedia. Questions for quiz and self-education

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Who, when borrowing money, can pledge his name?

A Kwakiutl Indian who borrows money may pledge his name. Until he returns the debt, no one will address him by name.

Authors: Jimmy Wales, Larry Sanger

 Random interesting fact from the Great Encyclopedia:

On which side in World War II, besides the Third Reich, did Hitler fight?

The Red Army machine gunner Semyon Konstantinovich Hitler, a Jew by nationality, took part in the Great Patriotic War. The award sheet has been preserved, according to which Hitler was presented to the medal "For Military Merit" for the accomplishment of a feat. True, the database "Feat of the People" reports that the medal "For Courage" was awarded to Semyon Konstantinovich Gitlev - the surname was accidentally or intentionally changed, it is not known.

 Test your knowledge! Did you know...

▪ What do molluscs eat?

▪ What is quantum theory?

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See other articles Section Big encyclopedia. Questions for quiz and self-education.

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Latest news of science and technology, new electronics:

Machine for thinning flowers in gardens 02.05.2024

In modern agriculture, technological progress is developing aimed at increasing the efficiency of plant care processes. The innovative Florix flower thinning machine was presented in Italy, designed to optimize the harvesting stage. This tool is equipped with mobile arms, allowing it to be easily adapted to the needs of the garden. The operator can adjust the speed of the thin wires by controlling them from the tractor cab using a joystick. This approach significantly increases the efficiency of the flower thinning process, providing the possibility of individual adjustment to the specific conditions of the garden, as well as the variety and type of fruit grown in it. After testing the Florix machine for two years on various types of fruit, the results were very encouraging. Farmers such as Filiberto Montanari, who has used a Florix machine for several years, have reported a significant reduction in the time and labor required to thin flowers. ... >>

Advanced Infrared Microscope 02.05.2024

Microscopes play an important role in scientific research, allowing scientists to delve into structures and processes invisible to the eye. However, various microscopy methods have their limitations, and among them was the limitation of resolution when using the infrared range. But the latest achievements of Japanese researchers from the University of Tokyo open up new prospects for studying the microworld. Scientists from the University of Tokyo have unveiled a new microscope that will revolutionize the capabilities of infrared microscopy. This advanced instrument allows you to see the internal structures of living bacteria with amazing clarity on the nanometer scale. Typically, mid-infrared microscopes are limited by low resolution, but the latest development from Japanese researchers overcomes these limitations. According to scientists, the developed microscope allows creating images with a resolution of up to 120 nanometers, which is 30 times higher than the resolution of traditional microscopes. ... >>

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Random news from the Archive

Neural noise helps you learn 30.03.2015

Twenty years ago, Stanford neuroscientists discovered strange noise activity in some brain neurons: they responded to stimuli that seemed to have nothing to do with them. And such activity arose precisely when the brain made a decision. The experiment itself was as follows: the experimental animals had to determine how dots on the screen move, from right to left or from left to right; in case of a correct answer, a reward was given. With the help of such a model, it is possible to study what processes in the brain accompany the formation of categories. The categorization of objects and phenomena is one of the most general features of the psyche that underlies learning, and it would really be interesting to know what is happening in the brain at this moment. In this case, as is easy to understand, it was necessary to distinguish two classes of objects: those that move in one direction, and those that move in the opposite direction.

As a result, it was possible to find a group of neurons that respond to movement, and among them were those that became especially active at the very moment of making a decision. However, their activity looked as if some cells shouted “from right to left!” in response to the point, while others shouted “from left to right!” in response to the same point, regardless of where the point actually moves. The noise level was reduced with the help of a reward for the correct answer - it tuned the neurons, making them more picky and less noisy, so that they began to respond mostly only to points of one, "their" category. And what was especially strange was that the neural noise did not occur at all in those areas of the cortex that are usually associated with decision making.

Why neurons are noisy in the "non-core" part of the brain, we managed to partially find out only now, with the help of a computer model developed by Tatiana Engel and her colleagues; the results of their work are published in Nature Communications. The model imitated the work of neural circuits connecting sensory areas of the brain with categorizing ones. Virtual neurons "observed" points that moved in different directions and which had to be divided into the same two classes, "right" and "left" - as in the original experiment with animals.

A simulated neural circuit, unlike a real one, can be deprived of the ability to make noise, which the researchers did. But it turned out that without the neural noise that accompanies the choice, the formation of categories is impossible. In other words, in order for a class of points moving from right to left to form in the mind, the brain must make a choice in "noisy" conditions, when some of the neurons will simultaneously "agitate" for the wrong answer. If we ignore the points and pick up a more realistic example, then imagine that every morning you choose between a cup of coffee and a cup of tea. You make a choice every day for a week, two weeks, a month, six months, and in the end you come to the conclusion that a morning cup of coffee is exactly what you need. But if it suddenly happens that your brain makes a choice without any noise, then you simply will not form a connection between the morning hours and coffee, the very concept of morning coffee will be absent.

Of course, there is a great temptation here to interpret neural noise as "doubt", or as "the need to consider all possible solutions." However, such formulations belong rather to the field of philosophy, which we can hardly correlate with specific neurophysiological phenomena so far. However, it may well be that new data in the future will allow the creation of some hardware methods that improve cognitive abilities - through the management of neural noise. But for now, it remains to be seen where it actually comes from: whether it is the sensory departments that generate it, or whether it is produced by other areas of the brain that are directly related to decision making, or whether both sensory and cognitive departments are involved here.

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