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Inspired by the brain: Mizzou researchers advance a new generation of energy-efficient AI hardware
Inspired by the brain: Mizzou researchers advance a new generation of energy-efficient AI hardware
AI, ecology converge: Intelligent systems inspire a new era of environmental discovery
AI, ecology converge: Intelligent systems inspire a new era of environmental discovery
Cosmic feedback at scale: Supercomputing reveals how quasars regulate the early Universe
Cosmic feedback at scale: Supercomputing reveals how quasars regulate the early Universe
From data deluge to diagnostic insight: RAMSES supercomputer powers next-generation AI pathology at Cologne
From data deluge to diagnostic insight: RAMSES supercomputer powers next-generation AI pathology at Cologne
Hidden order, revealed at scale: Supercomputing, electron ptychography uncover the inner workings of relaxor ferroelectrics
Hidden order, revealed at scale: Supercomputing, electron ptychography uncover the inner workings of relaxor ferroelectrics
Modeling life at the microscopic scale: A computational breakthrough in oxygen transport
Modeling life at the microscopic scale: A computational breakthrough in oxygen transport
Japanese scientists decode dolphin speed with supercomputing: Turbulence, vortices, and the hidden physics of propulsion
Japanese scientists decode dolphin speed with supercomputing: Turbulence, vortices, and the hidden physics of propulsion
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Featured

Inspired by the brain: Mizzou researchers advance a new generation of energy-efficient AI hardware

Deck May 7, 2026, 2:00 pm
As artificial intelligence systems grow ever more complex and powerful, the computational infrastructure that supports them faces mounting challenges. Modern AI models consume vast amounts of electricity, much of it spent not on calculations themselves, but on moving data between processors and memory. At the University of Missouri, researchers are taking a novel approach inspired by the brain, the most efficient computer known. In recent research featured by Show Me Mizzou, physicist Suchi Guha and her team showed that small adjustments in material structure can significantly improve the performance of brain-like electronic devices called synaptic transistors. Their findings mark a key advance toward neuromorphic computing systems that could offer far greater energy efficiency for tomorrow’s AI workloads.

Beyond the limits of conventional computing

Traditional computing architectures rely on the decades-old von Neumann model, where processing and memory exist in physically separate locations. While effective for conventional workloads, this architecture creates a severe bottleneck for modern AI systems.
 
Every operation requires data to shuttle repeatedly between processors and memory banks, consuming significant energy and limiting scalability. As AI data centers grow larger, this inefficiency has become a major technological and environmental concern.
 
Neuromorphic computing seeks to solve this problem by emulating the architecture of biological neural systems, where memory and processing occur simultaneously within interconnected synapses.
 
“The brain remains the gold standard for efficient computation,” Guha explained in the university release.
 
The human brain performs extraordinarily complex cognitive operations using roughly 20 watts of power, far less than today’s AI accelerators and GPU clusters require for comparable tasks.

Synaptic transistors and organic electronics

The Mizzou team focused on developing organic synaptic transistors, electronic devices designed to mimic the adaptive behavior of biological synapses.
 
Unlike traditional transistors that merely switch electrical signals on and off, synaptic transistors can both process and retain information in the same physical structure. This capability allows them to emulate learning behavior directly in hardware.
 
The researchers investigated a family of organic copolymer materials based on pyridyl triazole structures, studying how nanoscale interface characteristics affect synaptic performance.
 
Their findings revealed that even when materials appear nearly identical chemically, tiny structural variations at the interface between the semiconductor and insulating layer can significantly alter device behavior.
 
This “structure-function coupling” is critical because neuromorphic systems depend heavily on stable, tunable electronic behavior across millions, or eventually billions, of artificial synapses.

The growing importance of neuromorphic hardware

The Mizzou research arrives amid rapidly intensifying global interest in neuromorphic computing.
 
Scientists worldwide are investigating memristors, analog neural architectures, and brain-inspired materials as alternatives to conventional CMOS scaling. Recent studies from institutions including the University of Cambridge and Purdue University suggest next-generation neuromorphic devices could reduce AI energy consumption by as much as 70% while improving adaptability and parallelism.
 
The underlying motivation is increasingly urgent.
 
AI training systems now consume megawatt-scale power levels, and global electricity demand from AI infrastructure is projected to rise sharply over the coming decade. Conventional scaling approaches alone are unlikely to sustain future growth.
 
Neuromorphic architectures offer a fundamentally different path forward.
 
Rather than executing rigid sequential instructions, brain-inspired systems process information through massively parallel networks of adaptive elements. This approach is especially promising for:
  • Pattern recognition
  • Autonomous systems
  • Robotics
  • Sensor fusion
  • Edge AI computing
  • Scientific simulation workloads

Materials science as the foundation of intelligent hardware

One of the most significant aspects of the Mizzou study is its emphasis on materials engineering rather than solely algorithmic optimization.
 
Neuromorphic computing is fundamentally constrained by device physics. Creating hardware that behaves like biological neural systems requires materials capable of analog switching, adaptive conductance, and low-power memory retention.
 
This places materials science at the center of future AI infrastructure development.
 
The Mizzou team demonstrated that interface quality, not simply chemical composition, plays a decisive role in determining synaptic behavior. These findings provide critical design principles for future neuromorphic hardware platforms.
 
The work aligns with broader trends in neuromorphic engineering, where researchers are increasingly integrating material physics, electronics, and neuroscience into unified computing architectures.

Implications for supercomputing and AI infrastructure

While neuromorphic systems remain in early development, their long-term implications for supercomputing could be profound.
 
Future HPC systems may integrate brain-inspired accelerators alongside traditional CPUs and GPUs to improve efficiency for AI-heavy workloads. Neuromorphic co-processors could dramatically reduce energy costs associated with machine learning inference, adaptive simulations, and real-time data analysis.
 
This shift would represent more than an incremental improvement in processor design.
 
It would signal a transition from deterministic computing architectures toward adaptive computational ecosystems modeled directly on biological intelligence.

Learning from biology

The Mizzou research highlights a broader transformation underway in computing science: the recognition that future computational breakthroughs may come not from forcing traditional architectures to scale further, but from rethinking computation itself.
 
Biological systems evolved extraordinarily efficient methods for processing information under strict energy constraints. Neuromorphic computing seeks to harness those same principles in silicon and organic electronics.
 
The path forward remains challenging. Large-scale manufacturing, reliability, programmability, and integration with existing AI frameworks all remain active areas of research.
 
Yet studies like the one from Mizzou suggest the field is steadily advancing toward practical, energy-efficient intelligent hardware.
 
As AI systems continue to grow, the future of computing may increasingly depend not on building bigger machines, but on building machines that think more like brains.
A jaguar visits a water hole in this camera trap image.  Credit Wildlife Conservation Society/Mammal Spatial Ecology and Conservation Lab
A jaguar visits a water hole in this camera trap image. Credit Wildlife Conservation Society/Mammal Spatial Ecology and Conservation Lab
Featured

AI, ecology converge: Intelligent systems inspire a new era of environmental discovery

Tyler O'Neal, Staff Editor May 7, 2026, 10:00 am
Artificial intelligence is revolutionizing science, but its most profound impacts are unfolding beyond tech hubs and consumer devices. In ecology and environmental science, AI is emerging as a vital tool for unraveling the intricacies of life, uncovering hidden relationships within ecosystems, expediting conservation efforts, and transforming how researchers engage with the natural world. Evidence now shows AI is no longer just a computational aid for ecology; ecological insights are increasingly influencing AI’s own development. This convergence signals a new era, one that could reshape both environmental research and the evolution of intelligent systems.

Ecology meets machine intelligence

Ecological systems are among the most complex networks known to science. Forests, oceans, disease ecosystems, and wildlife populations all involve enormous numbers of interacting variables evolving across space and time.
 
Traditional statistical approaches often struggle to capture this complexity. AI, however, excels at identifying patterns across vast, multidimensional datasets.
 
Researchers are now using machine learning to:
  • Detect biodiversity changes from soundscapes.
  • Map food-web relationships between species.
  • Predict disease spillover risks.
  • Analyze ecosystem resilience under climate stress.
  • Identify hidden interactions within environmental networks.
At Rice University, scientists recently demonstrated how AI can reconstruct “tropical forest connectomes” by analyzing hundreds of hours of bioacoustic recordings from rainforest ecosystems. Instead of manually identifying animal calls, machine learning systems automatically segment and interpret ecological soundscapes, revealing how biodiversity varies across habitats.
 
The approach transforms ecology from a field constrained by human observation into one capable of continuous, large-scale environmental monitoring.

From wildlife data to ecological intelligence

One of the most promising developments involves AI’s ability to interpret ecological relationships that were previously invisible.
 
Researchers have begun applying advanced mathematical frameworks, such as optimal transport analysis, to compare ecological networks across entirely different ecosystems. These methods allow scientists to determine whether species occupying different continents may nonetheless perform equivalent ecological roles.
 
In practical terms, AI can now infer whether a jaguar in South America functions ecologically like a lion in Africa, even though the two species never interact directly.
 
This shift represents more than automation. It signals the emergence of computational ecology, where AI systems uncover ecological structure at scales too large and interconnected for manual analysis.

AI inspired by nature

The relationship between ecology and AI is becoming increasingly reciprocal.
 
Researchers argue that ecological principles may help solve some of artificial intelligence’s biggest weaknesses, including fragility, bias, and lack of adaptability.
 
Modern AI systems often perform exceptionally well in narrowly defined tasks but struggle when conditions change unexpectedly. Ecological systems, by contrast, are inherently resilient. Forests, microbial networks, and food webs adapt continuously to disturbance through diversity, redundancy, and decentralized interactions.
 
Scientists now believe these same principles could inspire more robust AI architectures.
 
For example:
  • Ecological diversity may help reduce “mode collapse” in neural networks.
  • Distributed ecological systems could inspire decentralized AI models.
  • Adaptive ecosystem behavior may guide self-correcting machine learning systems.
  • Multi-species interactions could inform collaborative AI agents.
This emerging philosophy reframes intelligence itself, not as isolated computation, but as a dynamic property of interconnected systems.

The rise of planetary-scale environmental monitoring

AI is also enabling unprecedented environmental observation capabilities.
 
Modern ecological research generates enormous datasets from:
  • Satellite imagery
  • Drone surveys
  • Camera traps
  • Bioacoustic sensors
  • Climate monitoring networks
  • Genomic sequencing
Processing these datasets requires advanced computational infrastructure and increasingly sophisticated AI pipelines.
 
In conservation science, machine learning systems are now identifying animal species automatically from camera-trap imagery, detecting illegal deforestation from satellite data, and estimating ecosystem health in near real time.
 
The scale is extraordinary. Some projects analyze millions of wildlife images or thousands of hours of environmental audio recordings, tasks that would take human researchers decades to complete manually.
 
AI reduces that timeline to hours.

Toward an ecological future for AI

Researchers involved in the emerging field emphasize that the implications extend beyond ecology itself.
 
The same computational systems developed for environmental science could help address broader global challenges, including:
  • Pandemic prediction
  • Food security
  • Climate adaptation
  • Biodiversity preservation
  • Sustainable resource management
At the same time, ecology may help guide AI development toward more ethical and socially resilient systems.
 
Scientists increasingly warn that AI trained only on narrow datasets risks inheriting blind spots and reinforcing systemic biases. Ecological thinking, by contrast, emphasizes diversity, interconnectedness, adaptation, and coexistence.
 
This philosophical shift may prove as important as the technology itself.

A new scientific frontier

The convergence of AI and ecology represents one of the most intellectually ambitious movements in modern science.
 
Ecology provides AI with models of resilience and adaptation refined through billions of years of evolution. AI provides ecology with computational capabilities powerful enough to analyze the staggering complexity of living systems.
 
Together, they are enabling researchers to see ecosystems not as isolated collections of species, but as deeply interconnected networks of information, energy, and behavior.
 
In doing so, AI is becoming more than a tool for studying nature.
 
It is beginning to learn from it.
Featured

Cosmic feedback at scale: Supercomputing reveals how quasars regulate the early Universe

O'Neal May 6, 2026, 8:00 am
Recent studies are reshaping our understanding of astrophysics, revealing that galaxy evolution in the early universe is not a solitary process. Instead, it is a computationally intricate and interconnected phenomenon, strongly influenced by extreme feedback from quasars. This feedback is now being unraveled through advanced supercomputing. Central to this new perspective is the increasing dependence on high-performance computing (HPC) to simulate, reconstruct, and decode the nonlinear physics of galaxy formation over cosmic timescales.

Quasars as cosmic “blowtorches”

Observational work led by researchers at the University of Arizona provides compelling evidence that quasars, highly luminous, accreting supermassive black holes, can suppress star formation not only within their host galaxies but across vast intergalactic distances.
 
Using data from the James Webb Space Telescope, scientists identified a deficit of star-forming galaxies surrounding some of the brightest quasars in the early universe. The mechanism is now understood as radiative feedback, where intense radiation heats and dissociates molecular hydrogen, the essential fuel for star formation.
 
Crucially, interpreting these observations requires sophisticated modeling. Radiative transfer, gas dynamics, and galaxy clustering must be simulated simultaneously, often across volumes spanning millions of light-years. These calculations are only tractable through massively parallel HPC systems.

Supercomputing the “galaxy ecosystem”

The emerging paradigm, sometimes described as a “galaxy ecosystem,” reframes cosmic evolution as a networked system in which energy output from one galaxy influences the fate of many others.
To quantify this, researchers employ cosmological hydrodynamics simulations, which integrate:
  • Gravity-driven structure formation
  • Radiative feedback from quasars
  • Gas cooling, heating, and turbulence
  • Star formation and chemical evolution
These simulations are computationally intensive, often requiring millions of CPU hours and distributed-memory architectures. Codes derived from frameworks such as adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) solvers, historically associated with tools like RAMSES, allow scientists to dynamically refine resolution in regions of interest, capturing both large-scale structure and small-scale physics.
 
Without supercomputing, resolving these multiscale interactions would be impossible.

Reading the Universe through data

Parallel to simulation efforts, European teams, including those affiliated with the University of Barcelona, are advancing new methodologies for “reading” the universe through data-driven analysis. Their work focuses on reconstructing the three-dimensional distribution of matter and radiation from observational datasets, a task that involves:
  • Processing petabyte-scale astronomical surveys
  • Applying inverse modeling techniques
  • Leveraging machine learning for pattern detection
These pipelines depend heavily on HPC infrastructure to handle the combinatorial complexity of parameter spaces and to reconcile observational uncertainty with theoretical models.

From observation to prediction

Another key contribution from recent studies is the integration of observational astronomy with predictive simulation. By combining telescope data with HPC-driven models, researchers can test competing hypotheses about galaxy evolution in silico.
 
For example, simulations now reproduce the observed suppression of star formation near quasars by explicitly modeling how radiation propagates through intergalactic gas. These models confirm that quasar feedback can extend over million-light-year scales, fundamentally altering the growth of neighboring galaxies.
 
This represents a shift from descriptive astronomy to predictive cosmology, where supercomputers act as virtual laboratories for testing the physics of the universe.

HPC as the engine of modern astrophysics

Across all the studies referenced, the common thread is clear: supercomputing is no longer ancillary to astrophysics; it is foundational.
 
Modern investigations into galaxy formation rely on HPC systems to:
  • Simulate billions of particles representing dark matter and gas.
  • Model radiation transport across cosmological volumes
  • Analyze high-resolution telescope data in near real time.
  • Perform statistical inference across vast parameter spaces.
These capabilities enable researchers to move beyond simplified models and capture the full complexity of cosmic evolution.

Toward a unified model of galaxy evolution

The convergence of observational breakthroughs and computational power is bringing astrophysics closer to a unified understanding of how galaxies form, evolve, and interact.
 
Quasars, once studied primarily as isolated phenomena, are now recognized as cosmic regulators, capable of shaping entire regions of the universe. Their influence, revealed through a combination of cutting-edge telescopes and supercomputing simulations, underscores the interconnected nature of cosmic structure.
 
As HPC systems continue to scale, the next frontier will be even more ambitious: fully coupled simulations that integrate dark matter, baryonic physics, radiation, and magnetic fields across the observable universe.
 
In this emerging era, the story of the cosmos is no longer written solely in the stars; it is computed.
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