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30.06.2016 15:57

Common mode as the key to intelligence

Dr. Boris Pawlowski Presse, Kommunikation und Marketing
Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel

    Research team from Kiel reproduces major functional principles of the brain using technology

    How does the human brain collect, process and store the flow of data which it constantly encounters? How does it manage cognitive tasks, which require complex interaction between various areas of the brain and overload high performance computers that work much more quickly? Why can the brain cope with all of this using much less energy?

    It is the aim of the research team from Kiel led by Professor Hermann Kohlstedt, Head of the Nanoelectronics Department at Kiel University (CAU) and spokesman of the national collaborative research project “Memristive devices for neural systems” (FOR 2093) funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) to track this impressive efficiency of the human brain using technology and to implement its method of operation in artificial neural networks. The scientists from Kiel have now succeeded in electronically reproducing two fundamental principles of operation of the human brain, memory and synchronisation. They recently published their results in the Applied Physics Letters professional journal.

    The human brain is a master of energy efficiency. It has approximately 100 billion nerve cells, also known as neurons, which manage with power of only about 20 Watt. Modern high performance computers would require many thousands of times more energy to perform similarly complex calculations as the brain manages. The neurons in the brain are linked to each other with synapses and form a highly complex network. The term “learning” in the neurological sense means that the synaptic connections in the brain are not determined statically. Instead they are continually readjusting on the basis of environmental influences, for example sensations. This makes it possible to store new memory content locally, known as the neurological plasticity of the brain.

    In addition to the spatial ability of the neural connections to adjust, there is another important building block to process information in the brain: the synchronisation of neural groups. Electrical impulses, so-called action potentials, form the basic unit of information processing in the brain. These impulses permanently transmit information between the neurons and in doing so they cross and influence the synaptic connections in the brain. “In the case of conscious sensory perceptions the spatial irregular occurrence of neural impulses changes into ordered structures suddenly and for a limited time”, says Professor Thorsten Bartsch, a neurologist at Kiel University and member of the research group. The previously independent impulses of the neurons synchronise themselves in this case even over areas of the brain that are not close together. Evidence of this synchronised “firing” in humans can also be shown by measuring brain waves (electroencephalography, EEG). “There have been discussions for a long time whether the human consciousness is closely linked with this synchronisation of the neural impulses. This may provide the key to gaining a better understanding of brain functions”, continued Bartsch.

    The scientists based in Kiel have now reproduced both these principles of how the brain works, in other words storing memory content in the synapses and the synchronicity of the neural impulses within an electronic circuit. “We have used a new type of electronic device for this to help us reproduce the processes of the brain”, explained Kohlstedt. These devices are described as memristors (from words “memory” and “resistor”). They are characterised by the fact that their electrical resistance depends on the charge that has flowed previously. “This method makes it possible to store different circumstances in biological networks, similar to “memory devices”, added Dr. Martin Ziegler, a scientist in the Nanoelectronics Department and sub-project leader in the research group.

    The researchers from Kiel have now coupled two oscillators to each other using memristors in their electronic circuit. Oscillators are switches, which generate periodic voltage impulses – similar to the “firing” of the neurons in the brain. At the start their impulses flowed in an asynchronous manner, with both oscillators therefore being uncoupled initially. Thanks to the adaptive “memory devices”, their oscillations soon synchronised. This enabled the researchers to equip an electrical circuit with the same fundamental properties that also characterise a biological neural network.

    Photos are available for download:

    http://www.uni-kiel.de/download/pm/2016/2016-226-1.jpg
    Caption: The connected oscillators start to communicate with each other like in a neural network… Photo: Christian Urban, Kiel University

    http://www.uni-kiel.de/download/pm/2016/2016-226-2.jpg
    Caption: …and become synchronised after a while until they all oscillate in the same rhythm as genuine neurons.
    Photo: Christian Urban, Kiel University

    http://www.uni-kiel.de/download/pm/2016/2016-226-3.jpg
    Caption: Tom Birkoben, Mirko Hansen and Marina Ignatov (from left to right) have developed an electrical circuit, which is in principle structured like human nerve cells.
    Photo: Christian Urban, Kiel University

    Original Publication:
    M. Ignatov, M. Hansen, M. Ziegler und H. Kohlstedt (2016): Synchronization of two memristively coupled van der Pol oscillators. Applied Physics Letters
    Link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4942832

    Contact:
    Professor Dr. Hermann Kohlstedt
    Nanoelectronics, Kiel University
    Tel.: 0431/880 6075
    E-Mail: hko@tf.uni-kiel.de

    Further information:
    Collaborative research project
    „Memristive devices for neural systems“ (FOR 2093):
    http://www.for2093.uni-kiel.de

    Details, which are only a millionth of a millimetre in size: This is what the research focus "Kiel Nano, Surface and Interface Science – KiNSIS" at Kiel University has been working on. In the nano-cosmos, different laws prevail than in the macroscopic world - those of quantum physics. Through intensive, interdisciplinary cooperation between materials science, chemistry, physics, biology, electrical engineering, computer science, food technology and various branches of medicine, the research focus aims to understand the systems in this dimension and to implement the findings in an application-oriented manner. Molecular machines, innovative sensors, bionic materials, quantum computers, advanced therapies and much more could be the result. More information at http://www.kinsis.uni-kiel.de

    Kiel University
    Press, Communication and Marketing, Dr. Boris Pawlowski
    Address: D-24098 Kiel, phone: +49 (0431) 880-2104, fax: +49 (0431) 880-1355
    E-Mail: ► presse@uv.uni-kiel.de, Internet: ► www.uni-kiel.de
    Twitter: ► www.twitter.com/kieluni, Facebook: ► www.facebook.com/kieluni
    Text / Redaktion: Christian Urban


    Bilder

    The connected oscillators start to communicate with each other like in a neural network…
    The connected oscillators start to communicate with each other like in a neural network…
    Quelle: Photo: Christian Urban, Kiel University

    …and become synchronised after a while until they all oscillate in the same rhythm as genuine neurons.
    …and become synchronised after a while until they all oscillate in the same rhythm as genuine neuron ...
    Quelle: Photo: Christian Urban, Kiel University


    Anhang
    attachment icon Tom Birkoben, Mirko Hansen and Marina Ignatov (from left to right) have developed an electrical circuit, which is in principle structured like human nerve cells.

    Merkmale dieser Pressemitteilung:
    Journalisten, Wissenschaftler
    Biologie, Elektrotechnik, Medizin, Physik / Astronomie, Werkstoffwissenschaften
    überregional
    Forschungsergebnisse, Forschungsprojekte
    Englisch


     

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