Litcius/Paper detail

Nanoscale neuromorphic networks and criticality: a perspective

Christopher Dunham, Sam Lilak, Joel Hochstetter, Alon Loeffler, Ruomin Zhu, Charles E. Chase, Adam Z. Stieg, Zdenka Kuncic, James K. Gimzewski

2021Journal of Physics Complexity33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Numerous studies suggest critical dynamics may play a role in information processing and task performance in biological systems. However, studying critical dynamics in these systems can be challenging due to many confounding biological variables that limit access to the physical processes underpinning critical dynamics. Here we offer a perspective on the use of abiotic, neuromorphic nanowire networks as a means to investigate critical dynamics in complex adaptive systems. Neuromorphic nanowire networks are composed of metallic nanowires and possess metal-insulator-metal junctions. These networks self-assemble into a highly interconnected, variable-density structure and exhibit nonlinear electrical switching properties and information processing capabilities. We highlight key dynamical characteristics observed in neuromorphic nanowire networks, including persistent fluctuations in conductivity with power law distributions, hysteresis, chaotic attractor dynamics, and avalanche criticality. We posit that neuromorphic nanowire networks can function effectively as tunable abiotic physical systems for studying critical dynamics and leveraging criticality for computation.

Topics & Concepts

Neuromorphic engineeringComputer scienceNanowireCriticalityChaoticNanotechnologyArtificial neural networkMaterials sciencePhysicsArtificial intelligenceNuclear physicsAdvanced Memory and Neural ComputingNeural dynamics and brain functionNeural Networks and Reservoir Computing