
Recent Progress in Synaptic Devices Paving the Way toward an Artificial Cogni‐Retina for Bionic and Machine Vision
Author(s) -
Berco Dan,
Shenp Ang Diing
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
advanced intelligent systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2640-4567
DOI - 10.1002/aisy.201900003
Subject(s) - interfacing , computer science , artificial intelligence , machine vision , bionics , von neumann architecture , artificial neural network , image processing , computer vision , computer hardware , image (mathematics) , operating system
The state‐of‐the‐art conception of a bionic/robotic eye is a somewhat bulky multipart system comprising a video camera connected to a processing unit that in turn communicates data through a wireless transmitter to either an in vivo retinal implant or a computer system. An artificial cogni‐retina is a millimeter‐scale, intelligent apparatus designed as a replacement for these systems, while executing simple image processing tasks. As a bionic limb, it can connect directly to the optic nerve and perform rudimentary cognitive functions such as perceiving, learning, remembering, and classifying elementary visual data. This theoretical system presents a quantum leap in terms of size, power consumption, and speed to both prosthetic human eyes and robotic vision in artificial intelligence‐based platforms such as autonomous vehicles. Recently, an increasing number of publications have used interesting materials in artificial synaptic devices that drive this idea closer toward becoming a real‐world application. Such devices may form a basis for hardware‐based deep learning artificial neural networks that can potentially execute image processing tasks within a single clock cycle compared to software algorithms running on conventional von Neumann machines that require millions of cycles to perform image sensor interfacing, memory fetch operations, and data path propagation.