New Hardware Mimics Spiking Behavior of Neurons With High Efficiency

Using silicon-based transistors that emit electrical charges, researchers were able to make a highly efficient Spiking Neural Network (SNN)

Nothing computes more efficiently than a brain, which is why scientists are working hard to create artificial neural networks that mimic the organ as closely as possible. Conventional approaches use artificial neurons that work together to learn different tasks and analyze data; however, these artificial neurons do not have the ability to actually “fire” like real neurons, releasing bursts of electricity that connect them to other neurons in the network. The third generation of this computing tech aims to capture this real-life process more accurately – but achieving such a feat is hard to do efficiently.

In a study published 30 April in IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices, a group of researchers in India propose a novel approach that allows these artificial neurons to fire in a much more efficient manner, allowing more “neurons” to be packed onto a computer chip. The advancement takes us one step closer to achieving more practical spiking neural networks (SNNs). This type of network could help us better understand the very organ that it’s inspired by, and thus better understand human disease, thought processes, and other mysteries of the brain.

Neurons in the brain “communicate” with each other by transmitting electrical spikes between one another. Networks of artificial spiking neurons can imitate this phenomenon by using leaky capacitors. Once a capacitor reaches a given threshold of electric charge, the voltage or current shoots out and affects the neighboring capacitor (analogous to another neuron).

A group of researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay designed the new SNN hardware. The design includes silicon-based electrical switches, called Metal-Oxide Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistors (MOSFETs), which are built on an insulating substrate.

To help the “neuron” fire and activate the other capacitors, the team added positively charged holes to the MOSFETs. Based on the nature of the MOSFETs, these holes allow for the quantum mechanical tunneling of electrons out of the capacitor. “The use of quantum mechanical tunneling provides incredible control, which is a huge advantage,” says Tanmay Chavan, a member of the research team that developed the SNN.

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