January 20, 2019 -- Weebit Nano (ASX: WBT), the semiconductor company seeking to develop and commercialise the next generation of memory technology, is launching a joint Neuromorphic ReRAM project with Politecnico di Milano (Polimi).
Weebit will collaborate with a team at the Politecnico di Milano in Italy, one of the leading European universities for Industrial and Information Engineering, Technology and Industrial Design, to test, characterise and implement its developed algorithms using Weebit’s ReRAM chips to demonstrate the capability of ReRAM-based hardware in neuromorphic and artificial intelligence applications.
The research will be led by Professor Daniele Ielmini, from the Electronics, Information and Bio-Engineering department. Professor Ielmini is a Fellow of the IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), has held visiting positions at Intel and Stanford University, and received the Intel 2013 Outstanding Researcher Award.
Professor Ielmini, who has conducted research on emerging non-volatile memories for several years, said: “Artificial intelligence currently uses software and traditional hardware technology limited in capability and scalability due to the industry reaching the limits of Moore’s Law. More efficient devices that allow faster and scalable performance are needed. We believe ReRAM devices are the best candidates for implementing braininspired intelligence hardware due to their resemblance to biological synapses. As a global research leader in this space, we are keen to collaborate with Weebit Nano to partner their SiOx chips with our developed algorithms.”
Coby Hanoch, CEO of Weebit Nano, said: “Senior Weebit managers have maintained close relations with Professor Ielmini over the years and have planned to collaborate on neuromorphic application development once Weebit chips reached a key stage in development. I am very happy we can now launch this project as part of our collaboration with world-leading research institutes using Weebit’s ReRAM technology. This research places the company in the middle of the latest work on platforms for artificial intelligence and other neuromorphic computing applications which will become standard over the next decade.”