374 research outputs found
Capacity, Fidelity, and Noise Tolerance of Associative Spatial-Temporal Memories Based on Memristive Neuromorphic Network
We have calculated the key characteristics of associative
(content-addressable) spatial-temporal memories based on neuromorphic networks
with restricted connectivity - "CrossNets". Such networks may be naturally
implemented in nanoelectronic hardware using hybrid CMOS/memristor circuits,
which may feature extremely high energy efficiency, approaching that of
biological cortical circuits, at much higher operation speed. Our numerical
simulations, in some cases confirmed by analytical calculations, have shown
that the characteristics depend substantially on the method of information
recording into the memory. Of the four methods we have explored, two look
especially promising - one based on the quadratic programming, and the other
one being a specific discrete version of the gradient descent. The latter
method provides a slightly lower memory capacity (at the same fidelity) then
the former one, but it allows local recording, which may be more readily
implemented in nanoelectronic hardware. Most importantly, at the synchronous
retrieval, both methods provide a capacity higher than that of the well-known
Ternary Content-Addressable Memories with the same number of nonvolatile memory
cells (e.g., memristors), though the input noise immunity of the CrossNet
memories is somewhat lower
A Compact CMOS Memristor Emulator Circuit and its Applications
Conceptual memristors have recently gathered wider interest due to their
diverse application in non-von Neumann computing, machine learning,
neuromorphic computing, and chaotic circuits. We introduce a compact CMOS
circuit that emulates idealized memristor characteristics and can bridge the
gap between concepts to chip-scale realization by transcending device
challenges. The CMOS memristor circuit embodies a two-terminal variable
resistor whose resistance is controlled by the voltage applied across its
terminals. The memristor 'state' is held in a capacitor that controls the
resistor value. This work presents the design and simulation of the memristor
emulation circuit, and applies it to a memcomputing application of maze solving
using analog parallelism. Furthermore, the memristor emulator circuit can be
designed and fabricated using standard commercial CMOS technologies and opens
doors to interesting applications in neuromorphic and machine learning
circuits.Comment: Submitted to International Symposium of Circuits and Systems (ISCAS)
201
CMOL: Second Life for Silicon?
This report is a brief review of the recent work on architectures for the
prospective hybrid CMOS/nanowire/ nanodevice ("CMOL") circuits including
digital memories, reconfigurable Boolean-logic circuits, and mixed-signal
neuromorphic networks. The basic idea of CMOL circuits is to combine the
advantages of CMOS technology (including its flexibility and high fabrication
yield) with the extremely high potential density of molecular-scale
two-terminal nanodevices. Relatively large critical dimensions of CMOS
components and the "bottom-up" approach to nanodevice fabrication may keep CMOL
fabrication costs at affordable level. At the same time, the density of active
devices in CMOL circuits may be as high as 1012 cm2 and that they may provide
an unparalleled information processing performance, up to 1020 operations per
cm2 per second, at manageable power consumption.Comment: Submitted on behalf of TIMA Editions
(http://irevues.inist.fr/tima-editions
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