Enabling In-SRAM Pattern Processing With Low-Overhead Reporting Architecture

2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-170
Author(s):  
Elaheh Sadredini ◽  
Reza Rahimi ◽  
Kevin Skadron
Keyword(s):  
2001 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Kaufmann ◽  
Gregor-Konstantin Elbel ◽  
Christoff Gössl ◽  
Benno Pütz ◽  
Dorothee P. Auer

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Buiatti ◽  
Elisa Di Giorgio ◽  
Manuela Piazza ◽  
Carlo Polloni ◽  
Giuseppe Menna ◽  
...  

AbstractHumans are endowed with an exceptional ability for detecting faces, a competence that in adults is supported by a set of face-specific cortical patches. Human newborns already shortly after birth preferentially orient to faces even when they are presented in the form of highly schematic geometrical patterns, over perceptually equivalent non-face-like stimuli. The neural substrates underlying this early preference are still largely unexplored. Is the adult face-specific cortical circuit already active at birth, or does its specialization develop slowly as a function of experience and/or maturation? We measured EEG responses in 1-4 days old awake, attentive human newborns to schematic face-like patterns and non-face-like control stimuli, visually presented with a slow oscillatory “peekaboo” dynamics (0.8 Hz) in a frequency-tagging design. Despite the limited duration of newborns’ attention, reliable frequency-tagged responses could be estimated for each stimulus from the peak of the EEG power spectrum at the stimulation frequency. Upright face-like stimuli elicited a significantly stronger frequency-tagged response than inverted face-like controls in a large set of electrodes. Source reconstruction of the underlying cortical activity revealed the recruitment of a partially right-lateralized network comprising lateral occipito-temporal and medial parietal areas largely overlapping with the adult face-processing circuit. This result suggests that the cortical route specialized in face processing is already functional at birth.Significance statementNewborns show a remarkable ability to detect faces even minutes after birth, an ecologically fundamental skill that is instrumental for interacting with their conspecifics. What are the neural bases of this expertise? Using EEG and a slow oscillatory visual stimulation, we identified a reliable response specific to face-like patterns in newborns, which underlying cortical sources largely overlap with the adult face-specific cortical circuit. This suggests that the development of face perception in infants might rely on an early cortical route specialized in face processing already shortly after birth.


2009 ◽  
Vol 47 (11) ◽  
pp. 1286-1292 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenjing Gao ◽  
Qian Kemao ◽  
Haixia Wang ◽  
Feng Lin ◽  
Hock Soon Seah

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