Synaptic Transistor

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ElZorro
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Synaptic Transistor

Post by ElZorro »

This is a game changer. I for one welcome our new Terminator overlords.

http://www.seas.harvard.edu/news/2013/1 ... t-computes
Synaptic transistor learns while it computes
FIRST OF ITS KIND, BRAIN-INSPIRED DEVICE LOOKS TOWARD HIGHLY EFFICIENT AND FAST PARALLEL COMPUTING

November 1, 2013

Cambridge, Mass. – November 1, 2013 – It doesn't take a Watson to realize that even the world's best supercomputers are staggeringly inefficient and energy-intensive machines.

Our brains have upwards of 86 billion neurons, connected by synapses that not only complete myriad logic circuits; they continuously adapt to stimuli, strengthening some connections while weakening others. We call that process learning, and it enables the kind of rapid, highly efficient computational processes that put Siri and Blue Gene to shame.
Materials scientists at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have now created a new type of transistor that mimics the behavior of a synapse. The novel device simultaneously modulates the flow of information in a circuit and physically adapts to changing signals.

Exploiting unusual properties in modern materials, the synaptic transistor could mark the beginning of a new kind of artificial intelligence: one embedded not in smart algorithms but in the very architecture of a computer. The findings appear in Nature Communications.
“There’s extraordinary interest in building energy-efficient electronics these days,” says principal investigator Shriram Ramanathan, associate professor of materials science at Harvard SEAS. “Historically, people have been focused on speed, but with speed comes the penalty of power dissipation. With electronics becoming more and more powerful and ubiquitous, you could have a huge impact by cutting down the amount of energy they consume.”

The human mind, for all its phenomenal computing power, runs on roughly 20 Watts of energy (less than a household light bulb), so it offers a natural model for engineers.

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complacent
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Re: Synaptic Transistor

Post by complacent »

whoa.
colin

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Sabre
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Re: Synaptic Transistor

Post by Sabre »

Hmmmm, no good will come from this!!! Watch out!!

Pretty cool way to do this actually. One of the things that caught my eye:
“In this paper, we demonstrate high-temperature operation, but the beauty of this type of a device is that the 'learning' behavior is more or less temperature insensitive, and that’s a big advantage,” says Ramanathan. “We can operate this anywhere from about room temperature up to at least 160 degrees Celsius.”
So even a flamethrower won't stop them, but dumping them in a vat of hot metal will do the trick :)
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