Humanoid robots are starting to gain something that once belonged firmly in the realm of science fiction: a sense of pain.
Robots are starting to gain something that looks a lot like a sense of touch, and in some cases even a crude version of pain.
Explore how neuromorphic chips and brain-inspired computing bring low-power, efficient intelligence to edge AI, robotics, and ...
A research team has recently developed a groundbreaking neuromorphic exposure control (NEC) system that revolutionizes machine vision under extreme lighting variations. This biologically inspired ...
Efforts have been underway for forty years to build computers that might emulate some of the structure of the brain in the way they solve problems. To date, they have shown few practical successes.
Neuromorphic computing, inspired by the brain, integrates memory and processing to drastically reduce power consumption compared to traditional CPUs and GPUs, making AI at the network edge more ...
(Nanowerk News) In a new study, researchers at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) show how a brain-inspired image sensor can go beyond the diffraction limit of light to detect miniscule objects ...
Inspired by human brain, neuromorphic computing technologies have made important breakthroughs in recent years as alternatives to overcome the power and latency shortfalls of traditional digital ...
The Machine and Neuromorphic Perception Laboratory (a.k.a. kLab) in the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) uses machine learning to solve ...
Although today’s computers can perform superhuman feats, even the best are no match for human brains at tasks like processing speech. But as Jessamyn Fairfield explains, a new generation of ...