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Creators/Authors contains: "Stewart, Terrence C"

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  1. Abstract Neuromorphic computing shows promise for advancing computing efficiency and capabilities of AI applications using brain-inspired principles. However, the neuromorphic research field currently lacks standardized benchmarks, making it difficult to accurately measure technological advancements, compare performance with conventional methods, and identify promising future research directions. This article presents NeuroBench, a benchmark framework for neuromorphic algorithms and systems, which is collaboratively designed from an open community of researchers across industry and academia. NeuroBench introduces a common set of tools and systematic methodology for inclusive benchmark measurement, delivering an objective reference framework for quantifying neuromorphic approaches in both hardware-independent and hardware-dependent settings. For latest project updates, visit the project website (neurobench.ai). 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2026
  2. A variety of advanced machine learning and deep learning algorithms achieve state-of-the-art performance on various temporal processing tasks. However, these methods are heavily energy inefficient—they run mainly on the power hungry CPUs and GPUs. Computing with Spiking Networks, on the other hand, has shown to be energy efficient on specialized neuromorphic hardware, e.g., Loihi, TrueNorth, SpiNNaker, etc. In this work, we present two architectures of spiking models, inspired from the theory of Reservoir Computing and Legendre Memory Units, for the Time Series Classification (TSC) task. Our first spiking architecture is closer to the general Reservoir Computing architecture and we successfully deploy it on Loihi; the second spiking architecture differs from the first by the inclusion of non-linearity in the readout layer. Our second model (trained with Surrogate Gradient Descent method) shows that non-linear decoding of the linearly extracted temporal features through spiking neurons not only achieves promising results, but also offers low computation-overhead by significantly reducing the number of neurons compared to the popular LSM based models—more than 40x reduction with respect to the recent spiking model we compare with. We experiment on five TSC datasets and achieve new SoTA spiking results (—as much as 28.607% accuracy improvement on one of the datasets), thereby showing the potential of our models to address the TSC tasks in a green energy-efficient manner. In addition, we also do energy profiling and comparison on Loihi and CPU to support our claims. 
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  3. The state-of-the-art in machine learning has been achieved primarily by deep learning artificial neural networks. These networks are powerful but biologically implausible and energy intensive. In parallel, a new paradigm of neural network is being researched that can alleviate some of the computational and energy issues. These networks, spiking neural networks (SNNs), have transformative potential if the community is able to bridge the gap between deep learning and SNNs. However, SNNs are notoriously difficult to train and lack precision in their communication. In an effort to overcome these limitations and retain the benefits of the learning process in deep learning, we investigate novel ways to translate between them. We construct several network designs with varying degrees of biological plausibility. We then test our designs on an image classification task and demonstrate our designs allow for a customized tradeoff between biological plausibility, power efficiency, inference time, and accuracy. 
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