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Science
Related: About this forumNeuromorphic Nanowire Networks learn and retain memory like human synapses.
Scientists have created a new type of artificial brain that can learn and remember things on the go, just like our brains do. This could lead to more innovative and greener machines that can handle complex and changing data in the real world.
The artificial brain is made of nanowire networks, tiny wires a billion times smaller than a meter. The cables form random patterns that look like the game Pick Up Sticks, but they also act like the neural networks in our brains. These networks can process information in different ways.
The nanowire networks can learn and remember using simple rules that change the electrical resistance at the points where the wires cross. This is called resistive memory switching, which happens when the cables get more or less conductive depending on the electrical signals they receive. This is similar to how our brain cells, or neurons, communicate with each other through synapses.
She said that their previous work showed that nanowire networks could remember simple tasks, but this work showed that they could also handle dynamic data that came online. She said this was a significant advance because online learning was hard to do with large and changing data sets. The usual way to do machine learning was to store the data first and then train a model on it.
The artificial brain is made of nanowire networks, tiny wires a billion times smaller than a meter. The cables form random patterns that look like the game Pick Up Sticks, but they also act like the neural networks in our brains. These networks can process information in different ways.
The nanowire networks can learn and remember using simple rules that change the electrical resistance at the points where the wires cross. This is called resistive memory switching, which happens when the cables get more or less conductive depending on the electrical signals they receive. This is similar to how our brain cells, or neurons, communicate with each other through synapses.
She said that their previous work showed that nanowire networks could remember simple tasks, but this work showed that they could also handle dynamic data that came online. She said this was a significant advance because online learning was hard to do with large and changing data sets. The usual way to do machine learning was to store the data first and then train a model on it.
More here: https://interestingengineering.com/innovation/artificial-brain-learns-on-the-fly-with-nanowire-networks?
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The singularity is coming at us hard and fast.
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Neuromorphic Nanowire Networks learn and retain memory like human synapses. (Original Post)
LudwigPastorius
Nov 2023
OP
LudwigPastorius
(12,227 posts)1. Apologies for the multiple posts.
Something wonky is going on.
sanatanadharma
(4,074 posts)2. Considering the subject matter, clearly something wonky is going on ...
...When science finally recognizes a grand-field-unified-theory of all things known and unknown, the answer will turn out to be consciousness, without which nothing is known.
"Consciousness" is singularly-unique.