"Neural Networks is an elegant, compact book that renders visible the too-often naturalized equation of brain and computer. The authors illuminate the march of neural networks through colonial hierarchies, clinical psychiatry, and the present era of machine learning along with its parascientific mediations." -Beth Coleman, University of Toronto "This multifaceted book reveals how neural networks today still play the ambivalent role of an almost mythological object, in between idealized visions of the brain and naturalized technology." -Matteo Pasquinelli, Ca’ Foscari University, Venice "A tightly written little book, Neural Networks convincingly weaves together methods from the history of science, media theory, and critical perspectives on AI development to produce a fresh account of how neural networks have been understood, represented, and put to work."-H-Net Reviews