Using the fungal electrical activity for computing : vimarsa

Using the fungal electrical activity for computing


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Materials have a variety of properties that can be used to solve computational problems, according to studies in substrate-based computing. BZ computers, slime mould computers, plant computers, and collision-based liquid marbles computers are just a few examples of prototypes produced for future and emergent computing devices. Modelling the computational processes that exist in such systems, however, is a difficult task in general, and determining which part of the embodied system is doing the computation is still somewhat ill-defined.
Claiming that fungi are the most intelligent living organisms in the world sounds like an exaggeration. However, a recent study by Mohammad Mahdi Dehshibi, a UOC researcher who is contributing to a growing body of knowledge on the use of fungal materials, concurs with this idea. Its implications are numerous and practical in both the medium and the long term. They include the possibility of using fungal tissues as actual computing devices. How could we use a fungus as if it were a computer?

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Mohammad Mahdi Dehshibi , Andrew Adamatzky , Unconventional Computing Laboratory , Sustainable Development Goal , Artificial Intelligence Lab , Scene Understanding , Computer Science , Mahdi Dehshibi , Technology Engineering Computer Science , Electrical Engineering Electronics , Electromagnetics , Elecommunications , நிலையான வளர்ச்சி இலக்கு , செயற்கை உளவுத்துறை ஆய்வகம் , காட்சி புரிதல் , கணினி அறிவியல் , தொழில்நுட்பம் பொறியியல் கணினி அறிவியல் ,

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