In 1984 while working on my Ph.D. thesis I became determined to understand what makes your average neighborhood barber so much more efficient compared to the most sophisticated computers. What are the brain mechanisms that enable us to process vast amounts of visual, tactile and other sensory information and rapidly assess variety of enormously complex situations without consciously realizing it? How can we access and utilize our built-in supercomputers? What do we need to do in order to further enhance our natural abilities to recognize patterns and how computers and other information technology devices could be used to develop a symbiosis between humans and machines thus creating a new class of decision makers that share the best abilities of both, humans and computers?
After almost 30 years of conducting thousands of experiments, researching, designing and creating hundreds computerized control system for pilots, telemetry analysts, electrical engineers, doctors and market traders it became fairly apparent to me that our subliminal, intuitive thinking and devices that allow us to efficiently interface with it is our only hope to stay in control of this run-away train that we call the technological progress. I call those devices, methods and algorithms âINTUITION AMPLIFIERSâ.
After almost 30 years of conducting thousands of experiments, researching, designing and creating hundreds computerized control system for pilots, telemetry analysts, electrical engineers, doctors and market traders it became fairly apparent to me that our subliminal, intuitive thinking and devices that allow us to efficiently interface with it is our only hope to stay in control of this run-away train that we call the technological progress. I call those devices, methods and algorithms âINTUITION AMPLIFIERSâ.