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New 3D device computes using living brain cells — bioelectronic device uses 3D electronic mesh design paired with living tissue

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Why This Matters

This groundbreaking 3D bioelectronic device integrating living brain cells and advanced electronics marks a significant step toward understanding neural computation and developing brain-inspired technologies. Its ability to perform pattern recognition and potentially treat neurological conditions highlights its transformative potential for both the tech industry and healthcare. As the technology scales, it could lead to more sophisticated neural interfaces and biohybrid systems, bridging the gap between biological and artificial intelligence.

Key Takeaways

Biological neurons growing over and through a layer of a 3D electronic mesh.

Researchers at Princeton University have created a three-dimensional neural network device that combines living brain cells and advanced embedded electronics. According to a recent press release, this 3D bioelectronic computer was programmed to differentiate patterns using computational techniques.

Basically, we are looking at living brain cells performing computational tasks outside the brain, using embedded electronics. This is not the first time scientists have used brain cells to perform computation. In previous attempts, scientists cultivated 2D cultures in petri dishes or 3D clusters, probing and monitoring activity from the outside.

The Princeton research took a different approach. To build the device, the team created a 3D mesh of microscopic wires and electrodes supported by a thin layer of epoxy. They then cultured tens of thousands of neurons into a vast 3D network that can perform computation, using the mesh as a scaffold.

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According to the researchers, this new approach “enabled them to record and stimulate the neurons' electrical activity at a much finer scale than past approaches”. Over the course of six months, they observed how the network developed, tested techniques to reinforce or weaken links between key neurons, and eventually trained an algorithm to identify recurring pulse patterns.

To test the system, the researchers presented two distinct patterns in separate experiments, and it successfully differentiated the patterns in both cases. The team aims to progressively scale the device to perform increasingly complex tasks.

According to the paper's first author, Kumar Mritunjay, a postdoctoral researcher in electrical and computer engineering, the technology could "not only help uncover the computing secrets of the brain but can also assist in understanding and possibly treating neurological diseases.”

The original aim of the research was to investigate fundamental problems in neuroscience by studying the activities of living brain cells. That aim remains. However, the researchers realized that it could also play a role in solving one of AI’s key bottlenecks: power consumption.

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