Study reveals why the human brain still outperforms AI

Princeton University research highlights the brain’s unmatched ability to adapt and transfer skills

Study reveals why the human brain still outperforms AI
Study reveals why the human brain still outperforms AI

Even in the age of advanced artificial intelligence, the human brain continues to outperform machines where it matters most adaptability.

A new study reveals how the brain’s unique design allows it to learn faster and apply skills across unfamiliar tasks.

Researchers from Princeton University uncovered this mechanism by studying rhesus macaques, whose brain functions closely mirror those of humans.

The animals were asked to recognize shapes and colors on a screen while responding with specific eye movements, as scientists monitored their neural activity through brain scans.

The study found that the brain relies on flexible clusters of neurons, referred to as “cognitive Legos.” These neural units can be reused, rearranged, and combined to perform new tasks, allowing the brain to build on existing knowledge rather than relearn from scratch something today’s AI systems still struggle to achieve.

“AI models can excel at individual tasks, but they lack the ability to generalize learning,” said neuroscientist Tim Buschman. “The brain succeeds because it can repurpose the same cognitive components across many different challenges.”

Researchers also observed that when certain neural blocks were unnecessary, their activity was reduced, enabling the brain to conserve resources and sharpen focus.

This modular and efficient structure helps explain how humans and primates adapt quickly to new situations, underscoring a key advantage biological intelligence holds over artificial systems.