
AbstractNeuromorphic architectures offer great promise for achieving computation capacities beyond conventional Von Neumann machines. The essential elements for achieving this vision are highly scalable synaptic mimics that do not undermine biological fidelity. Here we demonstrate that single solid-state TiO2memristors can exhibit non-associative plasticity phenomena observed in biological synapses, supported by their metastable memory state transition properties. We show that, contrary to conventional uses of solid-state memory, the existence of rate-limiting volatility is a key feature for capturing short-term synaptic dynamics. We also show how the temporal dynamics of our prototypes can be exploited to implement spatio-temporal computation, demonstrating the memristors full potential for building biophysically realistic neural processing systems.
Titanium, FOS: Computer and information sciences, 1000 Multidisciplinary, 572, Models, Neurological, Computer Science - Emerging Technologies, 600, Electrochemical Techniques, Learning algorithms, Synaptic Transmission, Article, Spatio-Temporal Analysis, Emerging Technologies (cs.ET), Biomimetics, Electric Impedance, Electronic devices, 570 Life sciences; biology, Learning algorithms; Electronic devices, 10194 Institute of Neuroinformatics
Titanium, FOS: Computer and information sciences, 1000 Multidisciplinary, 572, Models, Neurological, Computer Science - Emerging Technologies, 600, Electrochemical Techniques, Learning algorithms, Synaptic Transmission, Article, Spatio-Temporal Analysis, Emerging Technologies (cs.ET), Biomimetics, Electric Impedance, Electronic devices, 570 Life sciences; biology, Learning algorithms; Electronic devices, 10194 Institute of Neuroinformatics
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