How many brain cells does it take to play a game of Doom?
What was your favorite toy growing up? This paradox claims that memory—and every other one—is just a random fluctuation.
Innatera adopts Synopsys simulation technology to help design neuromorphic chips that enable low-power AI for wearables, ...
Recent technological advances have opened new exciting possibilities for the development of smart prosthetics, such as artificial limbs, joints or organs that can replace injured, damaged or amputated ...
No body, no dopamine, no problem. Scientists have successfully coached lab-grown brain tissue to solve a classic robotics challenge, proving that the will to learn is hardwired into our neurons.
A team led by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Assistant Professor Benjamin Cowley has compressed a 60-million-parameter ...
To enable more accurate estimation of connectivity, we propose a data-driven and theoretically grounded framework for optimally designing perturbation inputs, based on formulating the neural model as ...
Human brain cells are now interacting with computer systems, learning to play video games like Doom. Researchers have ...
Top Prize Editor’s Choice by Jesse Plotkin, Department of Neuroscience and Waggoner Center for Alcohol and Addiction Research Every year, the College of Natural Sciences invites faculty, staff and ...
Innatera announced that it has selected Synopsys simulation technology to help design neuromorphic chips that enable low-power AI for wearables, smart home devices, and digital twin industrial sensors ...
Light does not “think” in any human sense. Still, under the right conditions, it can behave in a way that looks uncannily ...
The next phase of AI, already underway, will integrate text with vision, sound, motion and even touch. This will produce systems that no longer 'read about' the world but perceive it.