Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 4 de 4
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Biosystems ; 212: 104588, 2022 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34979157

ABSTRACT

Fungal electronics is a family of living electronic devices made of mycelium bound composites or pure mycelium. Fungal electronic devices are capable of changing their impedance and generating spikes of electrical potential in response to external control parameters. Fungal electronics can be embedded into fungal materials and wearables or used as stand alone sensing and computing devices.


Subject(s)
Electronics , Fungi , Fungi/physiology , Mycelium
2.
Bioinspir Biomim ; 16(6)2022 03 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34624868

ABSTRACT

Memristors close the loop forI-Vcharacteristics of the traditional, passive, semi-conductor devices. A memristor is a physical realisation of the material implication and thus is a universal logical element. Memristors are getting particular interest in the field of bioelectronics. Electrical properties of living substrates are not binary and there is nearly a continuous transitions from being non-memristive to mem-fractive (exhibiting a combination of passive memory) to ideally memristive. In laboratory experiments we show that living oyster mushroomsPleurotus ostreatusexhibit mem-fractive properties. We offer a piece-wise polynomial approximation of theI-Vbehaviour of the oyster mushrooms. We also report spiking activity, oscillations in conduced current of the oyster mushrooms.


Subject(s)
Agaricales , Algorithms
3.
Biosystems ; 209: 104507, 2021 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34403720

ABSTRACT

Mycelium networks are promising substrates for designing unconventional computing devices providing rich topologies and geometries where signals propagate and interact. Fulfilling our long-term objectives of prototyping electrical analog computers from living mycelium networks, including networks hybridised with nanoparticles, we explore the possibility of implementing Boolean logical gates based on electrical properties of fungal colonies. We converted a 3D image-data stack of Aspergillus niger fungal colony to an Euclidean graph and modelled the colony as resistive and capacitive (RC) networks, where electrical parameters of edges were functions of the edges' lengths. We found that and, or and and-not gates are implementable in RC networks derived from the geometrical structure of the real fungal colony.


Subject(s)
Aspergillus niger/physiology , Computer Simulation , Models, Biological , Mycelium/physiology , Spores, Fungal/physiology , Aspergillus niger/cytology , Colony Count, Microbial , Electric Stimulation , Microscopy, Confocal , Microscopy, Fluorescence
4.
Biosystems ; 193-194: 104138, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32259561

ABSTRACT

A fungal colony maintains its integrity via flow of cytoplasm along mycelium network. This flow, together with possible coordination of mycelium tips propagation, is controlled by calcium waves and associated waves of electrical potential changes. We propose that these excitation waves can be employed to implement a computation in the mycelium networks. We use FitzHugh-Nagumo model to imitate propagation of excitation in a single colony of Aspergillus niger. Boolean values are encoded by spikes of extracellular potential. We represent binary inputs by electrical impulses on a pair of selected electrodes and we record responses of the colony from sixteen electrodes. We derive sets of two-inputs-on-output logical gates implementable the fungal colony and analyse distributions of the gates.


Subject(s)
Aspergillus niger/genetics , Colony Count, Microbial/methods , Computer Simulation , Gene Regulatory Networks , Mycelium/genetics , Cytoplasm/genetics
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL