A neuromorphic bionic eye with filter-free color vision using hemispherical perovskite nanowire array retina

Spherical geometry, adaptive optics, and highly dense network of neurons bridging the eye with the visual cortex, are the primary features of human eyes which enable wide field-of-view (FoV), low aberration, excellent adaptivity, and preprocessing of perceived visual information. Therefore, fabricat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2023-04, Vol.14 (1), p.1972-1972, Article 1972
Hauptverfasser: Long, Zhenghao, Qiu, Xiao, Chan, Chak Lam Jonathan, Sun, Zhibo, Yuan, Zhengnan, Poddar, Swapnadeep, Zhang, Yuting, Ding, Yucheng, Gu, Leilei, Zhou, Yu, Tang, Wenying, Srivastava, Abhishek Kumar, Yu, Cunjiang, Zou, Xuming, Shen, Guozhen, Fan, Zhiyong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Spherical geometry, adaptive optics, and highly dense network of neurons bridging the eye with the visual cortex, are the primary features of human eyes which enable wide field-of-view (FoV), low aberration, excellent adaptivity, and preprocessing of perceived visual information. Therefore, fabricating spherical artificial eyes has garnered enormous scientific interest. However, fusing color vision, in-device preprocessing and optical adaptivity into spherical artificial eyes has always been a tremendous challenge. Herein, we demonstrate a bionic eye comprising tunable liquid crystal optics, and a hemispherical neuromorphic retina with filter-free color vision, enabled by wavelength dependent bidirectional synaptic photo-response in a metal-oxide nanotube/perovskite nanowire hybrid structure. Moreover, by tuning the color selectivity with bias, the device can reconstruct full color images. This work demonstrates a unique approach to address the color vision and optical adaptivity issues associated with artificial eyes that can bring them to a new level approaching their biological counterparts. Designing full-color spherical artificial eyes remains a challenge. Here, Long et al. report a bionic eye where each pixel on the hemispherical retina can recognize different colors based on the unique bidirectional photo response; with optical adaptivity and neuromorphic preprocessing ability
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-37581-y