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Kazuya Terabe

Researcher at National Institute for Materials Science

Publications -  191
Citations -  8980

Kazuya Terabe is an academic researcher from National Institute for Materials Science. The author has contributed to research in topics: Thin film & Neuromorphic engineering. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 175 publications receiving 7924 citations.

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Short-term plasticity and long-term potentiation mimicked in single inorganic synapses

TL;DR: The discovery of a Ag(2)S inorganic synapse is reported, which emulates the synaptic functions of both STP and LTP characteristics through the use of input pulse repetition time and indicates a breakthrough in mimicking synaptic behaviour essential for the further creation of artificial neural systems that emulate characteristics of human memory.
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Quantized conductance atomic switch

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that a quantized conductance atomic switch (QCAS) can switch between ‘on’ and ‘off’ states at room temperature and in air at a frequency of 1 MHz and at a small operating voltage (600 mV).
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Atomic Switch: Atom/Ion Movement Controlled Devices for Beyond Von‐Neumann Computers

TL;DR: Novel functions, such as selective volatile/nonvolatile, synaptic, memristive, and photo-assisted operations have been demonstrated, which can not only improve the performance of present-day electronic systems, but also enable development of new types of electronic systems such as beyond von- Neumann computers.
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Learning Abilities Achieved by a Single Solid‐State Atomic Switch

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-modelling framework for nanoarchitectonics that automates the very labor-intensive and therefore time-heavy and therefore expensive and expensive process of designing materials for nanomaterials engineering.
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A nonvolatile programmable solid electrolyte nanometer switch

TL;DR: In this paper, a reconfigurable LSI employing a nonvolatile nanometer-scale switch, called NanoBridge, is proposed, and its basic operations are demonstrated, and operational tests with them have confirmed the switch's potential for use in programmable logic arrays.