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HRL to Begin Pioneering Research in Neuromorphic Electronics that Function Like the Biological Brain
HRL Laboratories, LLC, will begin pioneering research to develop electronics that will simulate the cognitive capabilities and efficiencies of the biological brain.
Malibu, CA (PRWEB) August 24, 2008 — HRL Laboratories, LLC, will begin pioneering research to develop electronics that will simulate the cognitive capabilities and efficiencies of the biological brain.
The daunting undertaking is part of the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency’s (DARPA) SyNAPSE, or Systems of Neuromorphic Adaptive Plastic Scalable Electronics, program. HRL will lead a group of industry and university research laboratories with expertise in core areas of neuro and cognitive science in the groundbreaking research.
Despite exponential advances in computing technology over the last decade, the limitations of hardware and architecture prohibit computers from functioning independently in real-world scenarios. The goal of the SyNAPSE program is to bridge biology and electronics and establish a new paradigm for creating more intelligent machines that can interact with, react to, and actually learn from their environments.
“Two things are enabling us to establish this new paradigm,” said Dr. Narayan Srinivasa, SyNAPSE Program Manager and Senior Scientist in HRL’s Information and System Sciences Office. “First is the advancement in microelectronics, which provides us greater density and speed at much lower power consumption than ever before. The other is a better understanding of neuroscience and how the brain functions at the synaptic, neuronal, network, and system levels.”
The HRL team’s ultimate goal is to build a low-power, compact electronic chip combining a novel analog circuit design and a neuroscience-inspired architecture that can address a wide range of cognitive abilities–perception, planning, decision making, and motor control. In the initial two phases of the SyNAPSE program, the team will translate the neuronal and synaptic functions of the biological cortex into similar microelectronic functions.
The first nine-month phase of the program will focus on designing, fabricating, and characterizing synaptic and neural elements and combining them into a high-density, interconnecting microelectronic “fabric,” which will be incorporated into a more complex system-level fabric design. The team will also develop simulation methods that integrate neural brain models with a virtual environment in which to test a sequence of tasks, including visual perception, planning, navigation and various types of learning.
In the following 15-month phase, HRL will combine the synaptic and neural elements to fabricate and demonstrate “cortical microcircuits” that can model various lower-level brain functions and actually “learn” by interacting with the environment. During this phase, extensive simulations and further testing will occur to verify the “behavioral competence” of the brain models.
“The follow-on phases of the project will create a technology that functions like the brain of a cat, which comprises 108 neurons and 1012 synapses,” Srinivasa said. “The human brain has roughly 1011 neurons and 1015 synapses.”
HRL has been a champion of developing more functional intelligent systems, which have myriad applications for the military and civilian populations. Previously, HRL participated in DARPA’s Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures (BICA) program, in which scientists designed brain models and architectures and used them to develop robust algorithms for perception, planning and motor control. HRL is currently participating in DARPA’s Cognitive Technology Threat Warning System (CT2WS) program, which will develop a bio-inspired threat-warning device that will enable fighting forces to rapidly detect and assess long- and short-range threats. HRL is also a participant in DARPA’s Urban Reasoning and Geospatial Exploitation Technology (URGENT) program, which will develop a revolutionary system for urban combat that includes a bio-inspired 3D object-recognition capability.
HRL Laboratories, LLC, Malibu, California (www.hrl.com) is a corporate research-and-development laboratory owned by The Boeing Company and General Motors specializing in research into sensors and materials, information and systems sciences, applied electromagnetics, and microelectronics. HRL provides custom research and development and performs additional R&D contract services for its LLC member companies, the U.S. government, and other commercial companies.
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Sunday, August 24th, 2008 at 4:05 am under

