IBM has built and tested two new “cognitive computing”
microchips whose design is inspired by the human brain.
In the
mammalian brain, neurons send chemical signals to each other across tiny gaps
called synapses. A neuron’s long “tail”, the axon, sends the signals from its
multiple terminals; the receptive parts of other neurons – the dendrites –
collect them.
Each of IBM’s
brain-mimicking silicon chips is
a few square millimetres in size and holds a
grid of 256 parallel wires that represent dendrites of computational “neurons”
crossed at right angles by other wires standing in for axons. The “synapses”
are 45-nanometre transistors connecting the criss-crossing wires and act as the
chips’ memory; one chip has 262,144 of them and the other 65,536. Each
electrical signal crossing a synapse consumes just 45 picajoules – a
thousandth of what typical computer chips use.
Because the
neurons and synapses are so close together, the pieces of hardware responsible
for computation and memory are also much closer than in ordinary computer
chips. Conventionally, the memory sits to the side of the processor, but in the
new chips the memory – the synapses – and the processors – the neurons – are on
top of each other, so they don’t need to use as much energy sending electrons
back and forth. That means the chips can perform parallel processing far more
efficiently than conventional computers.
In preliminary
tests, the chips were able to play a game of Pong, control a virtual car on a racecourse and identify an
image or digit drawn on a screen. These are all tasks computers have
accomplished before, but the new chips managed to complete them without needing
a specialised program for each task. The chips can also “learn” how to complete
each task if trained.
Fewer watts than Watson
Eventually, by
connecting many such chips, Dharmendra Modha of IBM Research – Almaden,
in San Jose, California, hopes to build a shoebox-sized supercomputer with
10 billion neurons and 100 trillion synapses that consumes just
1 kilowatt of power. That may still sound a lot – a standard PC uses only
a few hundred watts – but a supercomputer like IBM’s Watson uses hundreds of kilowatts. By
contrast, the ultra-efficient human brain is estimated to have 100 billion
neurons and at least 100 trillion synapses but consumes no more than
20 watts.
Kwabena Boahen of Stanford University,
California, says scale is one of the key issues. Until the chips contain as
many synapses as the human brain, it will be difficult to distinguish their
accomplishments from those of other computers.
The chips are
sponsored by a US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) project to
create computers whose abilities rival those of the human brain.
Source: NewScientist
No comments:
Post a Comment