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arxiv: 1801.02508 · v1 · pith:RBBFYDFSnew · submitted 2018-01-08 · 💻 cs.ET · cs.AR· cs.NE

Spiking memristor logic gates are a type of time-variant perceptron

classification 💻 cs.ET cs.ARcs.NE
keywords perceptrongatesmemristorcomputesinputinputslogicmemory
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Memristors are low-power memory-holding resistors thought to be useful for neuromophic computing, which can compute via spike-interactions mediated through the device's short-term memory. Using interacting spikes, it is possible to build an AND gate that computes OR at the same time, similarly a full adder can be built that computes the arithmetical sum of its inputs. Here we show how these gates can be understood by modelling the memristors as a novel type of perceptron: one which is sensitive to input order. The memristor's memory can change the input weights for later inputs, and thus the memristor gates cannot be accurately described by a single perceptron, requiring either a network of time-invarient perceptrons or a complex time-varying self-reprogrammable perceptron. This work demonstrates the high functionality of memristor logic gates, and also that the addition of theasholding could enable the creation of a standard perceptron in hardware, which may have use in building neural net chips.

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