DOOMBRINGER: Ehm... tak znovu. Mne to taky prijde jako prestreleny, ale jak rikam, slysel sem to rikat minimalne dva lidi ktery tomu rozumi mnohem vic nez ja. Thats all.
A to mám mgr. z jedné z kognitivnich ved. Co mas ty, bobecku?,)
Jen tak pro priklad letmy google:
Rita Carter does have it as:
"The brain has around 100 billion neurons. There are more potential connections between neurons than there are atoms in the universe." (The Human Brain Book, pg 39 (top right box); DK; 2009)
It may still be very, very premature in nature, as pointed out just above. However, I do like the way Dr. Ramachandran put it within context in his 1998 work, Phantoms in the Brain (p. 8):
...neurons make contacts with other neurons, at points called synapses. Each neuron makes anywhere from a thousand to ten thousand synapses with other neurons. A piece of your brain the size of a grain of sand would contain one hundred thousand neurons, two million axions, and one billion synapses . . . Given these figures, it's been calculated that the number of possible brain states--the number of permutations and combinations of activity that are theoretically possible--exceeds the number of elementary particles in the universe."