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The building blocks of a brain-inspired computer

Jack D. Kendall, Suhas Kumar

2020Applied Physics Reviews213 citationsDOI

Abstract

Computers have undergone tremendous improvements in performance over the last 60 years, but those improvements have significantly slowed down over the last decade, owing to fundamental limits in the underlying computing primitives. However, the generation of data and demand for computing are increasing exponentially with time. Thus, there is a critical need to invent new computing primitives, both hardware and algorithms, to keep up with the computing demands. The brain is a natural computer that outperforms our best computers in solving certain problems, such as instantly identifying faces or understanding natural language. This realization has led to a flurry of research into neuromorphic or brain-inspired computing that has shown promise for enhanced computing capabilities. This review points to the important primitives of a brain-inspired computer that could drive another decade-long wave of computer engineering.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceNeuromorphic engineeringUnconventional computingRealization (probability)Natural computingComputer architectureReservoir computingArtificial intelligenceHuman–computer interactionComputer engineeringArtificial neural networkDistributed computingRecurrent neural networkStatisticsMathematicsAdvanced Memory and Neural ComputingFerroelectric and Negative Capacitance DevicesNeural dynamics and brain function
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