Report on Neural-like Criticality in Ag-based Nanoparticle Networks
Blessing Adejube, Jamie Steel, Joshua Mallinson, Mariia Protsak,, Daniil Nikitin, Thomas Strunskus, Andrei Choukourov, Franz Faupel, Simon, Anthony Brown, and Alexander Vahl

TL;DR
This paper investigates the critical avalanche dynamics in Ag-based nanoparticle networks, demonstrating their potential for brain-inspired computing due to their reconfigurable, self-organized electrical activity.
Contribution
It reports the observation of neural-like criticality in various Ag-based nanoparticle networks, including monometallic, bimetallic, and composite types, highlighting their versatility for neuromorphic applications.
Findings
Evidence of avalanche criticality in all tested networks
Multiple estimates of the characteristic exponent agree
Ag-based NPNs are adaptable for integration into physical computing systems
Abstract
Emulating the neural-like information processing dynamics of the brain provides a time and energy efficient approach for solving complex problems. While the majority of neuromorphic hardware currently developed rely on large arrays of highly organized building units, such as in rigid crossbar architectures, in biological neuron assemblies make use of dynamic transitions within highly parallel, reconfigurable connection schemes. Neuroscience suggests that efficiency of information processing in the brain rely on dynamic interactions and signal propagations which are self-tuned and non-rigid. Brain-like dynamic and avalanche criticality have already been found in a variety of self-organized networks of nanoobjects, such as nanoparticles (NP) or nanowires. Here we report on the dynamics of the electrical spiking signals from Ag-based self-organized nanoparticle networks (NPNs) at the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Memory and Neural Computing · Plant and Biological Electrophysiology Studies · Neural dynamics and brain function
