DayOne will trial wetware computing with Cortical Labs and NUS, while BDx implements IMDA’s tropical data centre standard to cut cooling demand.
IBM researchers are developing a new computer architecture, better equipped to handle increased data loads from artificial intelligence. Their designs draw on concepts from the human brain and ...
What if next-generation computing systems were able to adopt the human brain’s information processing capacity and energy efficiency? Researchers at Rochester Institute of Technology have begun to ...
Next-generation computing systems modeled after the human brain’s information processing capability and energy efficiency are becoming a reality through work by Dhireesha Kudithipudi. Her research ...
A research team led by Prof. Tianyu Wang and Jialin Meng from the School of Integrated Circuits and State Key Laboratory of Crystal Materials at Shandong University has developed the world’s first ...
Innatera adopts Synopsys simulation technology to help design neuromorphic chips that enable low-power AI for wearables, ...
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Brain-Inspired AI Is Coming Faster Than You Think
Editor’s note: “Brain-Inspired AI Is Coming Faster Than You Think” was previously published in July 2025 with the title, “Beyond GPUs: Why Neuromorphic Chips Could Power the Future of AI.” It has ...
Brain-inspired computing promises cheaper, faster, more energy efficient processing, according to experts at a Beijing conference, who discussed everything from reverse engineering insect brains to ...
IBM is about to deliver the foundation of a brain-inspired supercomputer to Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, one of the federal government's top research institutions. The delivery is one small ...
Kaushik Roy is the Edward G. Tiedemann, Jr., Distinguished Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Purdue University and Director of the Center for Brain-Inspired Computing (C-BRIC). He ...
This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American For the past few years, tech companies and ...
China’s latest neuromorphic project has pushed a once speculative idea into the realm of claimed reality: a monkey’s brain activity, recreated inside a supercomputer. The country’s researchers say ...
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