Neuron-like chips could help revert neurological damage

Neuron-like chips could help revert neurological damage
Could there be soon bio-chips for Alzheimer’s?

A team of scientists at two british universities, Bath and Bristol, have developed neuron-like chips that could revert the neurological damage caused by neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s. These chips do not only resemble neuronal function but are also very efficient and low energy consuming. Can we ask for more?

Obviously, when I say chip, I mean a silicon chip, like those powering your computer or your mobile. However, this one actually behaves just like a brain cell, registering and responding to the electrical signals typical among neurons in the nervous system. 

How did they get train those chips to respond like neurons, do you ask.

It might seem like a small thing but to get here, the researchers had to combine knowledge in physics, biology and computer science to resemble neuronal function. First they had to analyse the intracellular ionic currents and transmembrane voltages. Then, they had to study the different patterns of activity of various types of neurons in rat hippocampus and respiratory cortex in response to a range of stimuli. Later, they had to use this data to program the analog electronic circuit in the chip to respond just like those neurons would under the same stimulation protocols. And so, they achieved a chip’s accuracy higher than 95% percent.

Like we already mentioned, these chips only need about 140 nanoWatts of power, while you mobile needs in the range of the tens of miliWatts. A difference in scale of about a million times!!

Read the rest in MappingIgnorance

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