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Tweak gets chameleon material to mimic brain cells


Adding small quantities of the element boron to vanadium dioxide makes the material function like a synapse, researchers report.
Each waking moment, our brain processes a massive amount of data to make sense of the outside world. Thus, by imitating the way the human brain solves everyday problems, neuromorphic systems have tremendous potential to revolutionize big data analysis and pattern recognition problems that are a struggle for current digital technologies.
For artificial systems to be more brain-like, however, they need to replicate how nerve cells communicate at their terminals, called the synapses.
In the study in
Journal of the American Chemical Society, researchers described a new material that captures the pattern of electrical activity at the synapse. ....

United States , Xiaofeng Qiang , Patrick Shamberger , Sarbajit Banerjee , Texasam University , Journal Of The American Chemical Society , Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory , National Science Foundation , Office Of Scientific Research , University Of Saskatchewan , American Chemical Society , Diane Sellers , Raymundo Arr , Air Force Office , Scientific Research , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , இதழ் ஆஃப் தி அமெரிக்கன் இரசாயன சமூகம் , லாரன்ஸ் பெர்க்லி தேசிய ஆய்வகம் , தேசிய அறிவியல் அடித்தளம் , அலுவலகம் ஆஃப் அறிவியல் ஆராய்ச்சி , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் சஸ்காட்செவன் , அமெரிக்கன் இரசாயன சமூகம் , டயான் விற்பனையாளர்கள் , ராய்முந்தோ அற்ற , அேக படை அலுவலகம் , அறிவியல் ஆராய்ச்சி ,

Chameleon-Like Material Spiked With Boron Comes Closer To Mimicking Brain Cells


Chameleon-Like Material Spiked With Boron Comes Closer To Mimicking Brain Cells
December 13, 2020
In a new study, Texas A&M researchers in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering describe a new material that comes close to mimicking how brain cells perform computations.
Each waking moment, our brain processes a massive amount of data to make sense of the outside world. By imitating the way the human brain solves everyday problems, neuromorphic systems have tremendous potential to revolutionize big data analysis and pattern recognition problems that are a struggle for current digital technologies.
But for artificial systems to be more brain-like, they need to replicate how nerve cells communicate at their terminals, called the synapses. ....

United States , Ruben Villarreal , David Prendergast , Xiaofeng Qiang , Timothyd Brown , Baiyu Zhang , Abhishek Parija , Theodoreeg Alivio , Erickj Braham , Lucia Zuin , Heidi Clarke , Patrick Shamberger , J Mike Walker , Sarbajit Banerjee , Texasam University , Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory , National Science Foundation , University Of Saskatchewan , Department Of Material Sciences , Department Of Chemistry , Journal Of The American Chemical Society , Department Of Mechanical Engineering , Department Of Materials Science , Office Of Scientific Research , Materials Science , American Chemical Society ,