Indian American scientist democratizes brain-inspired hardware at Texas university to accelerate sustainable artificial intelligence research ...
Your brain calculates complex physics every day and you don't even notice. This neuromorphic chip taps into the same idea.
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Although neuromorphic computing was first proposed by scientist Carver Mead in the late 1980s, it ...
Efforts to build brain-inspired computer hardware have been underway for decades, but the field has yet to have its breakout moment. Now, leading researchers say the time is ripe to start building the ...
Computer scientists often assume that the brain works by approximations, and therefore that computing hardware inspired by the brain won’t be as good at complex math as traditional hardware.
Cory Merkel, assistant professor of computer engineering at Rochester Institute of Technology, will represent the university as one of five collegiate partners in the new Center of Neuromorphic ...
As artificial intelligence platforms like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Copilot go mainstream, power bills from their usage are exploding. In response, researchers are racing to build hardware that ...
It’s estimated it can take an AI model over 6,000 joules of energy to generate a single text response. By comparison, your brain needs just 20 joules every second to keep you alive and cognitive. That ...
Dr. Joseph S. Friedman and his colleagues at The University of Texas at Dallas created a computer prototype that learns patterns and makes predictions using fewer training computations than ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. — It’s estimated it can take an AI model over 6,000 joules of energy to generate a single text response. By comparison, your brain needs just 20 joules every second to keep you alive and ...