Artificial Tactile Perception System Based on Spiking Tactile Neurons and Spiking Neural Networks.

Journal: ACS applied materials & interfaces
PMID:

Abstract

The artificial tactile perception system of this work utilizes a fully connected spiking neural network (SNN) comprising two layers. Its architecture is streamlined and energy-efficient as it directly integrates spiking tactile neurons with piezoresistive sensors and Pt/NbO/TiN memristors as input neurons. These spiking tactile neurons possess the ability to perceive and integrate pressure stimuli from multiple sensors and encode the information into rate-coded electrical spikes, closely resembling the behavior of a biological tactile neuron. The system's real-time information processing capability is demonstrated through an artificial perceptual learning system that successfully encodes and decodes the Morse code; the artificial perceptual learning system accurately recognizes and displays 26 English letters. Furthermore, the artificial tactile perception system is evaluated for the recognition of the MNIST data set, achieving a classification accuracy of 85.7% with the supervised spiking-rate-dependent plasticity learning rule. The key advantages of this artificial tactile perception system are its simple structure and high efficiency, which contributes to its practicality for various real-world applications.

Authors

  • Juan Wen
  • Le Zhang
    State Key Laboratory of Multiphase Complex Systems, Institute of Process Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China; College of Chemical Engineering, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China; Key Laboratory of Science and Technology on Particle Materials, Institute of Process Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 361021, China.
  • Yu-Zhe Wang
    School of Materials Science and Engineering, State Key Laboratory of Material Processing and Die & Mould Technology, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan 430074, P.R. China.
  • Xin Guo
    Department of Applied Mathematics, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong.