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Computer aims to mimic human brain

July 12, 2006 | | 190302377
Scientists at The University of Manchester are to build a computer which aims to mimic how nerve cells in the brain interact in a bid to engineer more Ôfault tolerantÕ electronics.
LONDON — Scientists at The University of Manchester are to build a computer which aims to mimic how nerve cells in the brain interact in a bid to engineer more Ôfault tolerant' electronics.

Professor Steve Furber, of The School of Computer Science, will lead the ˣ1million project funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. The work will be carried out in collaboration with the School of Electronics and Computer Science at the University of Southampton, using technology supplied by industrial partners ARM Ltd and Silistix Ltd.

"Our brains keep working despite frequent failures of their component neurons, and this Ôfault-tolerant' characteristic is of great interest to engineers who wish to make computers more reliable," said Professor Furber. "Our aim is to use the computer to understand better how the brain works at the level of spike patterns, and to see if biology can help us see how to build computer systems that continue functioning despite component failures.

The computer will be designed with the aim of modelling large numbers of neurons in real time and to track patterns of neural spikes as they occur in the brain.

It will be built using large numbers of simple microprocessors designed to interact like the networks of neurons found in the brain. The aim will be to place dozens of microprocessors on single silicon chip reducing the cost and power consumption of the computer.









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