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11/30/2021 15:30

New discovery opens the way for brain-like computers

Ulrika Ernström Press officer at University of Gothenburg, ulrika.ernstrom@science.gu.se Kommunikationsavdelningen / Communications Department
Schwedischer Forschungsrat - The Swedish Research Council

    Research has long strived to develop computers to work as energy efficiently as our brains. A study, led by researchers at the University of Gothenburg, has succeeded for the first time in combining a memory function with a calculation function in the same component. The discovery opens the way for more efficient technologies, everything from mobile phones to self-driving cars.

    In recent years, computers have been able to tackle advanced cognitive tasks, like language and image recognition or displaying superhuman chess skills, thanks in large part to artificial intelligence (AI). At the same time, the human brain is still unmatched in its ability to perform tasks effectively and energy efficiently.

    “Finding new ways of performing calculations that resemble the brain’s energy-efficient processes has been a major goal of research for decades. Cognitive tasks, like image and voice recognition, require significant computer power, and mobile applications, in particular, like mobile phones, drones and satellites, require energy efficient solutions,” says Johan Åkerman, professor of applied spintronics at the University of Gothenburg.

    Important breakthrough

    Working with a research team at Tohoko University, Åkerman led a study that has now taken an important step forward in achieving this goal. In the study, now published in the highly ranked journal Nature Materials, the researchers succeeded for the first time in linking the two main tools for advanced calculations: oscillator networks and memristors.

    Åkerman describes oscillators as oscillating circuits that can perform calculations and that are comparable to human nerve cells. Memristors are programable resistors that can also perform calculations and that have integrated memory. This makes them comparable to memory cells. Integrating the two is a major advancement by the researchers.

    “This is an important breakthrough because we show that it is possible to combine a memory function with a calculating function in the same component. These components work more like the brain’s energy-efficient neural networks, allowing them to become important building blocks in future, more brain-like computers.”

    Enables energy-efficient technologies

    According to Johan Åkerman, the discovery will enable faster, easier to use and less energy consuming technologies in many areas. He feels that it is a huge advantage that the research team has successfully produced the components in an extremely small footprint: hundreds of components fit into an area equivalent to a single bacterium. This can be of particular importance in smaller applications like mobile phones.

    “More energy-efficient calculations could lead to new functionality in mobile phones. An example is digital assistants like Siri or Google. Today, all processing is done by servers since the calculations require too much energy for the small size of a phone. If the calculations could instead be performed locally, on the actual phone, they could be done faster and easier without a need to connect to servers.”
    He notes self-driving cars and drones as other examples of where more energy-efficient calculations could drive developments.

    “The more energy-efficiently that cognitive calculations can be performed, the more applications become possible. That’s why our study really has the potential to advance the field.”

    The study was led by Professor Johan Åkerman at the University of Gothenburg, who is also the senior author of the article. The first author is Mohammad Zahedinejad, who completed his PhD at the University of Gothenburg in 2019. The study was done in collaboration with a research team at Tohoko University in Japan within the framework of the TOPSPIN project, which is funded by the European Research Council (ERC).

    About the research field
    Neuromorphic computing is an AI-related field attempting to imitate the brain’s neural networks. The research uses new algorithmic approaches that resemble how the human brain integrates with the surrounding world to deliver capacity approaching human cognition.


    Contact for scientific information:

    Contact: Johan Åkerman, professor of applied spintronics at the University of Gothenburg. Tel.: +46 (0)70-7104360, email: johan.akerman@physics.gu.se


    Original publication:

    About the research
    Article: Memristive control of mutual spin Hall nano-oscillator synchronization for neuromorphic computing
    Scientific journal: Nature Materials


    More information:

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41563-021-01153-6


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    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists
    Information technology, Materials sciences
    transregional, national
    Research results
    English


     

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