The future of AI is neuromorphic. Meet the scientists building digital 'brains' for your phone
AI services like Apple's Siri and others operate by sending your queries to faraway data centers, which send back responses. The reason they rely on cloud-based computing is that today's electronics don't come with enough computing power to run the processing-heavy algorithms needed for machine learning. The typical CPUs most smartphones use could never handle a system like Siri on the device. But Dr. Chris Eliasmith, a theoretical neuroscientist and co-CEO of Canadian AI startup Applied Brain Research, is confident that a new type of chip is about to change that. "Many have suggested Moore's law is ending and that means we won't get'more compute' cheaper using the same methods," Eliasmith says.
Mar-12-2017, 13:55:04 GMT
- Country:
- North America > Canada (0.35)
- Asia > Japan
- Honshū > Kantō > Tokyo Metropolis Prefecture > Tokyo (0.05)
- Industry:
- Information Technology > Services (0.55)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area
- Neurology (0.36)
- Technology: