216 research outputs found

    Nonlinear switched-current CMOS IC for random signal generation

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    A nonlinear switched-current circuit is presented that implements a chaotic algorithm for the generation of broadband, white analogue noise. The circuit has been fabricated in a double-metal, single-poly 1.6µm CMOS technology and uses a novel, highly accurate CMOS circuit strategy to realise piecewise-linear characteristics in the current-mode domain. Measurements from the silicon prototype show a flat spectrum from DC to ~30% of the clock frequency, for a clock frequency of 500kHz

    The design and implementation of a switched current neural network

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    High-Performance and Energy-Efficient Leaky Integrate-and-Fire Neuron and Spike Timing-Dependent Plasticity Circuits in 7nm FinFET Technology

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    In designing neuromorphic circuits and systems, developing compact and energy-efficient neuron and synapse circuits is essential for high-performance on-chip neural architectures. Toward that end, this work utilizes the advanced low-power and compact 7nm FinFET technology to design leaky integrate-and-fire (LIF) neuron and spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) circuits. In the proposed STDP circuit, only six FinFETs and three small capacitors (two 10fF and 20fF) have been utilized to realize STDP learning. Moreover, 12 transistors and two capacitors (20fF) have been employed for designing the LIF neuron circuit. The evaluation results demonstrate that besides 60% area saving, the proposed STDP circuit achieves 68% improvement in total average power consumption and 43% lower energy dissipation compared to previous works. The proposed LIF neuron circuit demonstrates 34% area saving, 46% power, and 40% energy saving compared to its counterparts. The neuron can also tune the firing frequency within 5MHz-330MHz using an external control voltage. These results emphasize the potential of the proposed neuron and STDP learning circuits for compact and energy-efficient neuromorphic computing systems

    Neuromorphic silicon neuron circuits

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    23 páginas, 21 figuras, 2 tablas.-- et al.Hardware implementations of spiking neurons can be extremely useful for a large variety of applications, ranging from high-speed modeling of large-scale neural systems to real-time behaving systems, to bidirectional brain–machine interfaces. The specific circuit solutions used to implement silicon neurons depend on the application requirements. In this paper we describe the most common building blocks and techniques used to implement these circuits, and present an overview of a wide range of neuromorphic silicon neurons, which implement different computational models, ranging from biophysically realistic and conductance-based Hodgkin–Huxley models to bi-dimensional generalized adaptive integrate and fire models. We compare the different design methodologies used for each silicon neuron design described, and demonstrate their features with experimental results, measured from a wide range of fabricated VLSI chips.This work was supported by the EU ERC grant 257219 (neuroP), the EU ICT FP7 grants 231467 (eMorph), 216777 (NABAB), 231168 (SCANDLE), 15879 (FACETS), by the Swiss National Science Foundation grant 119973 (SoundRec), by the UK EPSRC grant no. EP/C010841/1, by the Spanish grants (with support from the European Regional Development Fund) TEC2006-11730-C03-01 (SAMANTA2), TEC2009-10639-C04-01 (VULCANO) Andalusian grant num. P06TIC01417 (Brain System), and by the Australian Research Council grants num. DP0343654 and num. DP0881219.Peer Reviewe

    Gait Generation of Multilegged Robots by using Hardware Artificial Neural Networks

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    Living organisms can act autonomously because biological neural networks process the environmental information in continuous time. Therefore, living organisms have inspired many applications of autonomous control to small-sized robots. In this chapter, a small-sized robot is controlled by a hardware artificial neural network (ANN) without software programs. Previously, the authors constructed a multilegged walking robot. The link mechanism of the limbs was designed to reduce the number of actuators. The current paper describes the basic characteristics of hardware ANNs that generate the gait for multilegged robots. The pulses emitted by the hardware ANN generate oscillating patterns of electrical activity. The pulse-type hardware ANN model has the basic features of a class II neuron model, which behaves like a resonator. Thus, gait generation by the hardware ANNs mimics the synchronization phenomena in biological neural networks. Consequently, our constructed hardware ANNs can generate multilegged robot gaits without requiring software programs

    Advanced CMOS Integrated Circuit Design and Application

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    The recent development of various application systems and platforms, such as 5G, B5G, 6G, and IoT, is based on the advancement of CMOS integrated circuit (IC) technology that enables them to implement high-performance chipsets. In addition to development in the traditional fields of analog and digital integrated circuits, the development of CMOS IC design and application in high-power and high-frequency operations, which was previously thought to be possible only with compound semiconductor technology, is a core technology that drives rapid industrial development. This book aims to highlight advances in all aspects of CMOS integrated circuit design and applications without discriminating between different operating frequencies, output powers, and the analog/digital domains. Specific topics in the book include: Next-generation CMOS circuit design and application; CMOS RF/microwave/millimeter-wave/terahertz-wave integrated circuits and systems; CMOS integrated circuits specially used for wireless or wired systems and applications such as converters, sensors, interfaces, frequency synthesizers/generators/rectifiers, and so on; Algorithm and signal-processing methods to improve the performance of CMOS circuits and systems

    Demonstrating Advantages of Neuromorphic Computation: A Pilot Study

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    Neuromorphic devices represent an attempt to mimic aspects of the brain's architecture and dynamics with the aim of replicating its hallmark functional capabilities in terms of computational power, robust learning and energy efficiency. We employ a single-chip prototype of the BrainScaleS 2 neuromorphic system to implement a proof-of-concept demonstration of reward-modulated spike-timing-dependent plasticity in a spiking network that learns to play the Pong video game by smooth pursuit. This system combines an electronic mixed-signal substrate for emulating neuron and synapse dynamics with an embedded digital processor for on-chip learning, which in this work also serves to simulate the virtual environment and learning agent. The analog emulation of neuronal membrane dynamics enables a 1000-fold acceleration with respect to biological real-time, with the entire chip operating on a power budget of 57mW. Compared to an equivalent simulation using state-of-the-art software, the on-chip emulation is at least one order of magnitude faster and three orders of magnitude more energy-efficient. We demonstrate how on-chip learning can mitigate the effects of fixed-pattern noise, which is unavoidable in analog substrates, while making use of temporal variability for action exploration. Learning compensates imperfections of the physical substrate, as manifested in neuronal parameter variability, by adapting synaptic weights to match respective excitability of individual neurons.Comment: Added measurements with noise in NEST simulation, add notice about journal publication. Frontiers in Neuromorphic Engineering (2019
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