AI Article Synopsis

  • It's tough to find important stuff from a lot of messy data, especially with things like biometric information (like fingerprints or facial scans) that can be complex.
  • New computer technology that works like the brain could help make sense of all this data without needing super powerful computers or lots of experts.
  • The researchers created a special kind of device that can remember things and change its memory to help solve health care problems more easily.

Article Abstract

Extracting valuable information from the overflowing data is a critical yet challenging task. Dealing with high volumes of biometric data, which are often unstructured, nonstatic, and ambiguous, requires extensive computer resources and data specialists. Emerging neuromorphic computing technologies that mimic the data processing properties of biological neural networks offer a promising solution for handling overflowing data. Here, the development of an electrolyte-gated organic transistor featuring a selective transition from short-term to long-term plasticity of the biological synapse is presented. The memory behaviors of the synaptic device were precisely modulated by restricting ion penetration through an organic channel via photochemical reactions of the cross-linking molecules. Furthermore, the applicability of the memory-controlled synaptic device was verified by constructing a reconfigurable synaptic logic gate for implementing a medical algorithm without further weight-update process. Last, the presented neuromorphic device demonstrated feasibility to handle biometric information with various update periods and perform health care tasks.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10321737PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adg5946DOI Listing

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