Neuromorphic circuit for temporal odor encoding in turbulent environments
Shavika Rastogi, Nik Dennler, Michael Schmuker, Andr\'e van Schaik

TL;DR
This paper presents a neuromorphic electronic nose circuit inspired by mammalian olfactory pathways that efficiently encodes odor concentration in turbulent environments, enabling real-time detection and localization.
Contribution
It introduces a novel neuromorphic circuit that extracts and encodes odor features into spikes, improving real-time odor detection in dynamic, turbulent conditions.
Findings
The circuit encodes gas concentration via spike timing differences.
It accurately recognizes gases and estimates concentrations in artificial plumes.
The approach mimics mammalian olfactory bulb spiking behavior.
Abstract
Natural odor environments present turbulent and dynamic conditions, causing chemical signals to fluctuate in space, time, and intensity. While many species have evolved highly adaptive behavioral responses to such variability, the emerging field of neuromorphic olfaction continues to grapple with the challenge of efficiently sampling and identifying odors in real-time. In this work, we investigate Metal-Oxide (MOx) gas sensor recordings of constant airflow-embedded artificial odor plumes. We discover a data feature that is representative of the presented odor stimulus at a certain concentration - irrespective of temporal variations caused by the plume dynamics. Further, we design a neuromorphic electronic nose front-end circuit for extracting and encoding this feature into analog spikes for gas detection and concentration estimation. The design is inspired by the spiking output of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsect Pheromone Research and Control · Olfactory and Sensory Function Studies · Advanced Chemical Sensor Technologies
