Publication | Closed Access
Synaptic plasticity functions in an organic electrochemical transistor
185
Citations
27
References
2015
Year
EngineeringOrganic ElectronicsSynaptic TransmissionChemistryStructural PlasticityNeuromorphic EngineeringNeuromorphic DevicesBiophysicsNeurocomputersOrganic SemiconductorOrganic Electrochemical TransistorSignal ProcessingSynaptic Plasticity FunctionsElectrochemistryOrganic Charge-transfer CompoundSynaptic PlasticityNeural CircuitsBioelectronicsNeuroscienceMedicine
Synaptic plasticity functions play a crucial role in the transmission of neural signals in the brain. Short-term plasticity is required for the transmission, encoding, and filtering of the neural signal, whereas long-term plasticity establishes more permanent changes in neural microcircuitry and thus underlies memory and learning. The realization of bioinspired circuits that can actually mimic signal processing in the brain demands the reproduction of both short- and long-term aspects of synaptic plasticity in a single device. Here, we demonstrate the implementation of neuromorphic functions similar to biological memory, such as short- to long-term memory transition, in non-volatile organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs). Depending on the training of the OECT, the device displays either short- or long-term plasticity, therefore, exhibiting non von Neumann characteristics with merged processing and storing functionalities. These results are a first step towards the implementation of organic-based neuromorphic circuits.
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