Chalcogenide optomemristors for multi-factor neuromorphic computation.

Journal: Nature communications
Published Date:

Abstract

Neuromorphic hardware that emulates biological computations is a key driver of progress in AI. For example, memristive technologies, including chalcogenide-based in-memory computing concepts, have been employed to dramatically accelerate and increase the efficiency of basic neural operations. However, powerful mechanisms such as reinforcement learning and dendritic computation require more advanced device operations involving multiple interacting signals. Here we show that nano-scaled films of chalcogenide semiconductors can perform such multi-factor in-memory computation where their tunable electronic and optical properties are jointly exploited. We demonstrate that ultrathin photoactive cavities of Ge-doped Selenide can emulate synapses with three-factor neo-Hebbian plasticity and dendrites with shunting inhibition. We apply these properties to solve a maze game through on-device reinforcement learning, as well as to provide a single-neuron solution to linearly inseparable XOR implementation.

Authors

  • Syed Ghazi Sarwat
    IBM Research- Europe, Säumerstrasse, 8803, Rüschlikon, Switzerland. ghs@zurich.ibm.com.
  • Timoleon Moraitis
    IBM Research - Zurich, Säumerstrasse 4, 8803, Rüschlikon, Switzerland.
  • C David Wright
    Centre for Metamaterial Research and Innovation, University of Exeter, Exeter, EX4 4QF, UK. david.wright@exeter.ac.uk.
  • Harish Bhaskaran
    Department of Materials, University of Oxford, Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3PH, UK. harish.bhaskaran@materials.ox.ac.uk.