Litcius/Paper detail

SuperMind: a survey of the potential of superconducting electronics for neuromorphic computing

Michael L. Schneider, Emily Toomey, Graham E. Rowlands, Jeff Shainline, Paul Tschirhart, Ken Segall

2022Superconductor Science and Technology66 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Neuromorphic computing is a broad field that uses biological inspiration to address computing design. It is being pursued in many hardware technologies, both novel and conventional. We discuss the use of superconductive electronics for neuromorphic computing and why they are a compelling technology for the design of neuromorphic computing systems. One example is the natural spiking behavior of Josephson junctions and the ability to transmit short voltage spikes without the resistive capacitive time constants that typically hinder spike-based computing. We review the work that has been done on biologically inspired superconductive devices, circuits, and architectures and discuss the scaling potential of these demonstrations.

Topics & Concepts

Neuromorphic engineeringUnconventional computingComputer scienceElectronicsResistive touchscreenCapacitive sensingScalingSpike (software development)Electronic circuitComputer architectureElectrical engineeringElectronic engineeringArtificial intelligenceArtificial neural networkDistributed computingEngineeringOperating systemComputer visionGeometryMathematicsSoftware engineeringAdvanced Memory and Neural ComputingNeural Networks and Reservoir ComputingFerroelectric and Negative Capacitance Devices