Human brain replacement chips tested Rain Neuromorphics has completed a digital processor design that most closely mimics the human brain. The chip contains 10,000 digital neurons and will be manufactured using a 180nm process. Scaling up and reducing technology norms will help create a solution for artificial intelligence problems with extremely low consumption and powerful cognitive functions. As you know, the human brain is a neural network of approximately 90 billion neurons. The input of each neuron is a set of "hairs" called dendrites. A potential (voltage pulse) propagates through them, which makes the neuron react in one way or another. For a neuron to react, an averaged sum of potentials of all signals from many dendrites is required, which makes the brain an "analog computer". The response of a neuron is also represented by an action potential, but it spreads along other nerve "hairs" - axons. As a rule, neurons have one axon (output), which ends in a synapse - the place of interaction with the dendrites of other neurons, if we talk about the brain. In a chip, brain chemistry is either difficult or impossible to replicate. Therefore, imitation will always be conditional and the Rain Neuromorphics chip is no exception in this regard. But on the other hand, progress has been made in terms of the reproduction of dendrites. According to the developers, the first chips will be able to provide 125 million INT8 parameters for processing vision, speech, natural language and recommendations, while consuming less than 50 watts. The company expects samples to be available in 2024, with silicon ready for commercial supply in 2025.