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Mirador de la Memoria

von Ewa Miendlarzewska

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1141,728,513 (2.88)1
"A masterpiece ahead of its time, a prescient rendering of new thought on emotion , and the inspiration for a romantic future."--Book Review ConciergeIn 2066, Dr. Paulina Kochanowska, a neuroscientist in her sixties is under house arrest. The pilot experiment that she had installed began damaging some of its participants. The experiment, Project Unison, is being investigated by the national ethics council. While locked in her Geneva, Switzerland home, a young writer, Emma Printemps, comes to interview her for a biography.During the interview sessions, Dr. Kochanowska, reminisces upon the many neuroinnovations she has created over the years. For instance, sleep cuing for learning and problem solving, dream engineering for un-learning and changing habits, the matching algorithm for finding the right life partner, and all the AI (artificial intelligence) that's gone into creating her companion affective robot, Salvatore. Before the end, the doctor discloses the details about this current brave undertaking that decodes and transfers the action of several brains to one connected network. All along, the doctor is experiencing some recall problems while the network evolves. She doesn't remember the beginning of the last project and is confused about how she has helped create the affective robot. Was it her who did it, at all? Turns out that she is the victim of her most recent experiment and has started losing memory after a marked event that happened just a few weeks before. Eventually, the questioning leads the doctor to come to understand her condition and Emma finally reveals the true reason for her presence in Kochanowska¿s home prison.… (mehr)
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Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Wow! This book is written quite differently from what I expected. It's certainly written by someone who is quite smart, given the language and words used. It does ramble a bit, and it's certainly not for everyone (it took me quite a while over several sessions to read this.)

The book follows a lady, her manservant robot, a reporter and a few other "occasional" characters. The lady is being interviewed about her past, and brings up all kinds of memories about her invention of a device that allows shared memories. The interviews get more and more personal, but it rambles back and forth with all this psychology etc. about how memory works. It is as if the author wants this to be 1/2 psychology textbook and 1/2 novel. ( )
  daleala | Nov 4, 2019 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
The scientific concepts in this novel are interesting but the style of the novel completely bored me. The descriptions of the neuroscience are so detailed and there is so much of it that the narrative arch is completely lost. I suspect this story will be of most interest to those who are interested in the science concepts rather than the story. I gave up on it.

*I was given a free copy of this book through the LibraryThing Early Reviewers program. ( )
  spbooks | Feb 14, 2019 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
I found this book somewhat difficult to follow. There were a few times I wasn't sure who was narrating. The plot was hard to follow and honestly I think this could have used further editing. But as a first effort it's readable and I would give Miendlarzewska's next book a try based on this one. ( )
  g33kgrrl | Jan 15, 2019 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Very dense, and I imagine, not to many readers taste, but those who persevere through the biology of memory transference will still find themselves without much in the way of plot, and certainly no action. However there is an underlying curiosity (as posited during the novel one of the driving forces of intelligence) to find out what it is all about, and how it resolves.

The story consists of a series of increasingly personal interviews between a younger author looking for material for a biography and a biological researcher currently suspended from work while the ethics committee study her latest and unauthorised experimentation into communal memory. At the same time she is cared for by a mobile AI robot who is seen as increasingly unique with special emphatic capabilities the provenance of which must be fully understood. But there's little desire from Paulina the biologist to do so.

The POV is mostly Paulina's internal monologues as she tries to come to grips with the various thought processes that drive her, and these speculations over the cause and function of memory and emotion (currently very hard and unsolved problems of biology and neuroscience) are technical and hard to read for anyone un-educated in the brain structures. I'm certainly not in a position to say how inaccurate they are. I'm always a little wary of books where the author needs to promote their pHd on the cover, although I do acknowledge the effort required to obtain one, but it's not a good start to a book. Likewise the character jumps to the reporter are infrequent enough to jar you out of Pauline's thoughts, but add little to the story. And ethics committees don't get to subvert their own guidelines in that manner.

It is curious and does raise some interesting questions and thoughts about how technology robotics AI and neuroscience will progress in the near future, but ultimately more depth is required. ( )
1 abstimmen reading_fox | Jan 15, 2019 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
This is a placeholder review for PROJECT UNISON: Mirador de la Memoria: A NeuroScience Fiction Suspense by Ewa Miendlarzewska. It is not a finised review until I select a star rating. I received an ARC through LibraryThing's Early Reviewer's program.
  Wordwizardw | Apr 29, 2019 |
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"A masterpiece ahead of its time, a prescient rendering of new thought on emotion , and the inspiration for a romantic future."--Book Review ConciergeIn 2066, Dr. Paulina Kochanowska, a neuroscientist in her sixties is under house arrest. The pilot experiment that she had installed began damaging some of its participants. The experiment, Project Unison, is being investigated by the national ethics council. While locked in her Geneva, Switzerland home, a young writer, Emma Printemps, comes to interview her for a biography.During the interview sessions, Dr. Kochanowska, reminisces upon the many neuroinnovations she has created over the years. For instance, sleep cuing for learning and problem solving, dream engineering for un-learning and changing habits, the matching algorithm for finding the right life partner, and all the AI (artificial intelligence) that's gone into creating her companion affective robot, Salvatore. Before the end, the doctor discloses the details about this current brave undertaking that decodes and transfers the action of several brains to one connected network. All along, the doctor is experiencing some recall problems while the network evolves. She doesn't remember the beginning of the last project and is confused about how she has helped create the affective robot. Was it her who did it, at all? Turns out that she is the victim of her most recent experiment and has started losing memory after a marked event that happened just a few weeks before. Eventually, the questioning leads the doctor to come to understand her condition and Emma finally reveals the true reason for her presence in Kochanowska¿s home prison.

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Ewa Miendlarzewskas Buch Mirador de la Memoria wurde im Frührezensenten-Programm LibraryThing Early Reviewers angeboten.

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