Brain-inspired chip fits 1m ‘neurons’ on postage stamp

Scientists have produced a new computer chip that mimics the organisation of the brain, and squeezed in one million computational units called "neurons". They describe it as a supercomputer the size of a postage stamp. Each neuron on the chip connects to 256 others, and together they can pick out the key features in a visual scene in real time, using very little power.
 
The design is the result of a long-running collaboration, led by IBM, and is published in the journal Science. "The cumulative total is over 200 person-years of work," said Dr Dharmendra Modha, the publication’s senior author. He told BBC News the processor was "a new machine for a new era". But it will take some time for the chip, dubbed TrueNorth, to be commercially useful. This is partly because programmes have to be written from scratch to run on this type of chip, instead of on the traditional style which was conceived in the 1940s and still powers nearly all modern computers.