Comments Subscribe to Personal Liberty Digest™ News Feed Subscribe to Personal Liberty Digest™ 

High-Tech Brain Is Scientists’ Goal

BIELEFELD, Germany (UPI) — German scientists said they’re making headway toward creating a computer that would work like a human brain, learning by itself without programming.

Researchers at Bielefeld University say they are experimenting with memristors — electronic microcomponents that imitate natural nerves.

After constructing a memristor that is capable of learning, Andy Thomas from the university’s Faculty of Physics said he is using them as key components in a blueprint for an artificial brain.

Memristors are the electronic equivalent of the brain’s synapses, the bridges across which nerve cells (neurons) communicate with each other and which increase in strength the more often they are used.

Like synapses, memristors can learn from earlier impulses, Thomas said in a university release Tuesday.

Because of their similarity to synapses, memristors are particularly suitable for building an artificial brain, he said.

“They allow us to construct extremely energy-efficient and robust processors that are able to learn by themselves,” Thomas said, suggesting principles taken from nature can be recreated in technological systems to develop a neuromorphic or nerve-like computer

“This is all possible because a memristor can store information more precisely than the bits on which previous computer processors have been based,” Thomas said. “This is how memristors deliver a basis for the gradual learning and forgetting of an artificial brain.”

UPI - United Press International, Inc.

Since 1907, United Press International (UPI) has been a leading provider of critical information to media outlets, businesses, governments and researchers worldwide.

Facebook Conversations

Join the Discussion:
View Comments to “High-Tech Brain Is Scientists’ Goal”

Comment Policy: We encourage an open discussion with a wide range of viewpoints, even extreme ones, but we will not tolerate racism, profanity or slanderous comments toward the author(s) or comment participants. Make your case passionately, but civilly. Please don't stoop to name calling. We use filters for spam protection. If your comment does not appear, it is likely because it violates the above policy or contains links or language typical of spam. We reserve the right to remove comments at our discretion.

Is there news related to personal liberty happening in your area? Contact us at newstips@personalliberty.com

blog comments powered by Disqus
Bottom