Saturday, February 24, 2024

THE BRAIN A SERVO MECHANISM


Servo-mechanisms are divided into two general types:
(1) where the target, goal, or “answer” is known, and the objective is to reach it or accomplish it.

(2) where the target or “answer” is not known and the objective is to discover or locate it.

The human brain and nervous system operates in both ways.

An example of the first type is the self-guided torpedo, or the interceptor missile. The target or goal is known— an enemy ship or plane. The objective is to reach it. Such machines must “know” the target they are shooting for. They must have some sort of propulsion system which propels them forward in the general direction of the target. They must be equipped with “sense organs” (radar, sonar, heat perceptors, etc.) which bring information from the target. These “sense organs” keep the machine informed when it is on the correct course (positive feedback) and when it commits an error and gets off course (negative feedback). When negative feedback informs the mechanism that it is “off the beam” too far to the right, the corrective mechanism automatically causes the rudder to move so that it will steer the machine back to the left. If it “overcorrects” and heads too far to the left, this mistake is made known through negative feedback, and the corrective device moves the rudder so it will steer the machine back to the right.

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