Understanding the building blocks for an electronic brain by Staff Writers Groningen, Netherlands (SPX) Oct 23, 2018
Computer bits are binary, with a value of 0 or 1. By contrast, neurons in the brain can have all kinds of different internal states, depending on the input that they received. This allows the brain to process information in a more energy-efficient manner than a computer. University of Groningen (UG) physicists are working on memristors, resistors with a memory, made from niobium-doped strontium titanate, which mimic how neurons work. Their results were published in the Journal of Applied Physics on 21 October. The brain is superior to traditional computers in many ways. Brain cells use less energy, process information faster and are more adaptable. The way that brain cells respond to a stimulus depends on the information that they have received, which potentiates or inhibits the neurons. Scientists are working on new types of devices which can mimic this behavior, called memristors.
Memory She observed that the duration of the pulse with which the resistance was set determined how long the 'memory' lasted. This could be between one to four hours for pulses lasting between a second and two minutes. Furthermore, she found that after 100 switching cycles, the material showed no signs of fatigue.
Forgetting In addition, the devices that Goossens made combine both memory and processing in one device, which is more efficient than traditional computer architecture in which storage (on magnetic hard discs) and processing (in the CPU) are separated. Goossens conducted the experiments described in the paper during a research project as part of the Master in Nanoscience degree programme at the University of Groningen. Goossens' research project took place within the group of students supervised by Dr. Tamalika Banerjee of Spintronics of Functional Materials. She is now a Ph.D. student in the same group.
Questions Questions that Goossens want to answer include what parameters influence the states that are achieved. 'And if we manufacture 100 of these devices, do they all work the same? If they don't, and there is device-to-device variation, that doesn't have to be a problem. After all, not all elements in the brain are the same.' A.S. Goossens, A. Das, and T. Banerjee: Electric field driven memristive behavior at the Schottky interface of Nb-doped SrTiO3. Journal of Applied Physics, special topic section: New physcis and materials for neuromorphic computation. 21 October 2018
Sound, vibration recognition boost context-aware computing Pittsburgh PA (SPX) Oct 18, 2018 Smart devices can seem dumb if they don't understand where they are or what people around them are doing. Carnegie Mellon University researchers say this environmental awareness can be enhanced by complementary methods for analyzing sound and vibrations. "A smart speaker sitting on a kitchen countertop cannot figure out if it is in a kitchen, let alone know what a person is doing in a kitchen," said Chris Harrison, assistant professor in CMU's Human-Computer Interaction Institute (HCII). "But if t ... read more
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