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Qiangfei Xia

Researcher at University of Massachusetts Amherst

Publications -  168
Citations -  15844

Qiangfei Xia is an academic researcher from University of Massachusetts Amherst. The author has contributed to research in topics: Memristor & Neuromorphic engineering. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 160 publications receiving 10640 citations. Previous affiliations of Qiangfei Xia include Princeton University & Hewlett-Packard.

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Memristors with diffusive dynamics as synaptic emulators for neuromorphic computing

TL;DR: The diffusive Ag-in-oxide memristor and its dynamics enable a direct emulation of both short- and long-term plasticity of biological synapses, representing an advance in hardware implementation of neuromorphic functionalities.
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Memristive crossbar arrays for brain-inspired computing

TL;DR: The challenges in the integration and use in computation of large-scale memristive neural networks are discussed, both as accelerators for deep learning and as building blocks for spiking neural networks.
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Analogue signal and image processing with large memristor crossbars

TL;DR: It is shown that reconfigurable memristor crossbars composed of hafnium oxide memristors on top of metal-oxide-semiconductor transistors are capable of analogue vector-matrix multiplication with array sizes of up to 128 × 64 cells.
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Fully memristive neural networks for pattern classification with unsupervised learning

TL;DR: It is shown that a diffusive memristor based on silver nanoparticles in a dielectric film can be used to create an artificial neuron with stochastic leaky integrate-and-fire dynamics and tunable integration time, which is determined by silver migration alone or its interaction with circuit capacitance.
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Memristor―CMOS Hybrid Integrated Circuits for Reconfigurable Logic

TL;DR: Hybrid reconfigurable logic circuits were fabricated by integrating memristor-based crossbars onto a foundry-built CMOS (complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor) platform using nanoimprint lithography, as well as materials and processes that were compatible with the CMOS.