30 research outputs found

    A brain-inspired cognitive system that mimics the dynamics of human thought

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    In recent years, some impressive AI systems have been built that can play games and answer questions about large quantities of data. However, we are still a very long way from AI systems that can think and learn in a human-like way. We have a great deal of information about how the brain works and can simulate networks of hundreds of millions of neurons. So it seems likely that we could use our neuroscientific knowledge to build brain-inspired artificial intelligence that acts like humans on similar timescales. This paper describes an AI system that we have built using a brain-inspired network of artificial spiking neurons. On a word recognition and colour naming task our system behaves like human subjects on a similar timescale. In the longer term, this type of AI technology could lead to more flexible general purpose artificial intelligence and to more natural human-computer interaction

    Impact of clinical phenotypes on management and outcomes in European atrial fibrillation patients: a report from the ESC-EHRA EURObservational Research Programme in AF (EORP-AF) General Long-Term Registry

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    Background: Epidemiological studies in atrial fibrillation (AF) illustrate that clinical complexity increase the risk of major adverse outcomes. We aimed to describe European AF patients\u2019 clinical phenotypes and analyse the differential clinical course. Methods: We performed a hierarchical cluster analysis based on Ward\u2019s Method and Squared Euclidean Distance using 22 clinical binary variables, identifying the optimal number of clusters. We investigated differences in clinical management, use of healthcare resources and outcomes in a cohort of European AF patients from a Europe-wide observational registry. Results: A total of 9363 were available for this analysis. We identified three clusters: Cluster 1 (n = 3634; 38.8%) characterized by older patients and prevalent non-cardiac comorbidities; Cluster 2 (n = 2774; 29.6%) characterized by younger patients with low prevalence of comorbidities; Cluster 3 (n = 2955;31.6%) characterized by patients\u2019 prevalent cardiovascular risk factors/comorbidities. Over a mean follow-up of 22.5 months, Cluster 3 had the highest rate of cardiovascular events, all-cause death, and the composite outcome (combining the previous two) compared to Cluster 1 and Cluster 2 (all P <.001). An adjusted Cox regression showed that compared to Cluster 2, Cluster 3 (hazard ratio (HR) 2.87, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.27\u20133.62; HR 3.42, 95%CI 2.72\u20134.31; HR 2.79, 95%CI 2.32\u20133.35), and Cluster 1 (HR 1.88, 95%CI 1.48\u20132.38; HR 2.50, 95%CI 1.98\u20133.15; HR 2.09, 95%CI 1.74\u20132.51) reported a higher risk for the three outcomes respectively. Conclusions: In European AF patients, three main clusters were identified, differentiated by differential presence of comorbidities. Both non-cardiac and cardiac comorbidities clusters were found to be associated with an increased risk of major adverse outcomes

    Design, Analysis and Implementation of a Self-Timed Duplex Communication System

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    Microprocessors: the engines of the digital age

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    Experiments with a Sparse Distributed Memory for Text Classification

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    Encoding Data to Use with a Sparse Distributed Memory

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    Very large-scale neuromorphic systems for biological signal processing

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    This chapter is a white paper describing a platform for scaled-up neuromorphic systems to ‘human brain size’ complexity. Such a system will be necessary for massive search and analysis tasks while interacting with biological data. This system would consist of similar number of neurons and synapses as in an adult human brain. One of the largest bottlenecks is the huge synaptic complexity that would result from connecting billions of neurons. The purpose of this chapter is to describe a feasible architecture that could handle the enormous communication bandwidth necessary for such a large-scale neuromorphic system. The proposed approach is grounded in the assumption that we would only be able to appreciate the utility of a neuromorphic system when it is somewhat similar to the human brain in terms of energy consumption and size. Inspired by the recent advancements in SoC architecture, a novel scalable intercluster communication network is proposed here. A particularly useful instantiation of this occurs for the global synaptic communication, interconnecting the local clusters of synapse arrays. The core of the proposed solution is a novel switching architecture in the CMOS back end of line (BEOL) that is expected to be extremely power efficient. In contrast to a fixed predefined bus that is shared over all connected local clusters, the proposed solution will allow a multitude of dedicated point-to-point connections that can be switched dynamically
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