| February 26-27, 2016 |
| Research Institute of Electrical Communication, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan |
PROGRAM
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February 26 (Friday)
| 13:00- | Registration | |
| 13:30-13:40 | Opening remarks | |
| Session 1: Brainware LSI Technologies I | ||
| 13:40-14:10 | NVM Neuromorphic Core with 64k-cell (256-by-256) Phase Change Memory SangBum Kim (IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, USA) | |
| 14:10-14:40 | Brain-Inspired Computing for Variation-Resilient VLSI System Masanori Natsui (Tohoku University, Japan) | |
| 14:40-15:10 | Snake-like Robot Based on "TEGOTAE-Based Control" Takeshi Kano (Tohoku University, Japan) | |
| 15:10-15:30 | Coffee break | |
| Session 2: Brainware LSI Technologies II | ||
| 15:30-16:00 | Implicit Brain and Explicit Brain -Dual Structure of Intelligence Koichi Osuka (Osaka University, Japan) | |
| 16:00-16:30 | Programable architecture for associative memories Jean-Philippe Diguet (University of Southern Brittany, France) | |
| 16:30-17:00 | AER Spike Detection using Parameterized Associative Memory on BRAMs for SNN Hardware Implementations Jordi Madrenas (Technical University of Catalunya, Spain) | |
February 27 (Saturday)
| Session 3: Recognition & Learning in Brainware LSI I | ||
| 09:00-09:30 | Stochastic implementation of auditory filters Naoya Onizawa (Tohoku University, Japan) | |
| 09:30-10:00 | The sense of presence and verisimilitude induced by audio, visual and vibrational information Shuichi Sakamoto (Tohoku University, Japan) | |
| 10:00-10:30 | Computational Auditory Scene Analysis in complex multi-talker scenarios Volker Hohmann (University of Oldenburg,Germany) | |
| 10:30-10:50 | Coffee break | |
| Session 4: Recognition & Learning in Brainware LSI II | ||
| 10:50-11:20 | VLSI implementation of a neural network model for detecting planar surface from local image motion Hisanao Akima (Tohoku University, Japan) | |
| 11:20-11:50 | Modeling the visual process of contextual cueing effect Zheng Xiong Yuan (Tohoku University, Japan) | |
| 11:50-12:20 | Psychophysical TMS: delayed fovea noise disrupts discrimination of object details in the visual periphery Sheng He (University of Minnesota, USA) | |
| 12:20-12:30 | Closing remarks | |