A team at University of Massachusetts Amherst developed artificial neurons that fire in the same voltage range as living cells. Silicon and biology can now speak the same electrical language.
Neuroscientists at the University of Pittsburgh have pinpointed a specific neuronal mechanism that helps explain how anxiety can disrupt the decision-making process and often leads to poor choices.
UMass Amherst engineers create low-voltage artificial neurons using bacterial nanowires, promising efficient bio-inspired computing.
DNA computers can use biological material to perform mathematical functions and store information, but their power sources have been fragile. Researchers now say they’ve developed a reliable source: ...
These days, we take it for granted that you can connect a cheap piece of hardware to a microcontroller and have an amazing debugging experience. Stop the program. Examine memory and registers. You ...
As the No. 1 Catholic university in the nation for sponsored engineering research and development, the University of Dayton is dedicated to research for the common good. Our quest? To turn discovery ...