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Virtual Dictionary
Neuromorphic Neuromorphic is a young term, derived from work by Carver Mead in the late 1980s, and describes the use of analogue or digital circuitry to mimic the interconnecting and ever changing neuron structure of a living brain. Below, we offer a selection of links from our resource databases which may match this term.
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News containing the Term Neuromorphic:
(16/05/2007)
Kwabena Boahen is a neuroscientist at Stanford University. An unusual neuroscientist, with a spotless laboratory, and not one trace of nerve tissue. Instead, at the centre of the lab is a single chip, linked to a larger computer system.
(31/10/2004)
Charles Higgins, assistant professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Arizona has stated a simple, succinct fact about current robotics: "We don't have robots that can physically compete with humans in any way,...
(18/12/2008)
University of Wisconsin-Madison research psychiatrist Giulio Tononi, who was recently selected to take part in the creation of a "cognitive computer," says the goal of building a computer as quick and flexible as a small mammalian brain i...
(20/03/2010)
Almost since computing began, scientists and technologists have been fascinated with the idea of a computer that works similarly to the human brain. In 2008, the first "memristor" was built, a device that is designed to behave in a manner...
(20/03/2007)
On the spur of hearing one brain modelling project is being shut down, we bring news of another one starting up. An ambitious project to model the cerebral...
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