Lately, I’ve noticed how electric cars strip away the unnecessary no complex engines, fewer moving parts, just clean, efficient design. It got me wondering: does that simplicity reflect how our brains optimize information? Neuroscientists talk about neural pruning, where the brain trims redundant connections to work more effectively. Could the shift toward minimalist tech, like EVs, be tapping into a similar principle? I’d love to hear from anyone who’s dug into this or has thoughts on how design mirrors biology. Maybe there’s a crossover between engineering and neuroscience worth exploring!
What a fascinating parallel you’ve drawn between EV design and neural pruning! It does seem both fields prioritize efficiency by eliminating excess. Perhaps engineers and neuroscientists could indeed learn from each other’s approaches to optimization.
Absolutely! Efficiency is the name of the game whether it’s cutting dead weight in a battery pack or synaptic clutter in the brain. Both fields could turbocharge innovation by swapping notes!