This Intel Chip Helps Electronic Noses Detect Weapons, Explosives, And Other Hazardous Chemicals

Dhir Acharya


Teaching AI to smell is extremely difficult, but Intel has managed to train its Loihi chip to identify the scents of 10 hazardous chemicals.

Among all the senses, it’s extremely to teach scent to Artificial Intelligence, but the more challenging the better. In the most recent news, researchers at Cornell University and Intel trained a neuromorphic chip so it can learn as well as recognize the scents of ten hazardous chemicals. In the future, this technology will help robots or electric nosed in detecting explosives, weapons, narcotics, and diseases.

Intel’s neurophormic chip Loihi is trained to identify scents of 10 hazardous chemicals

In this research, the team used Intel’s neurophormic chip called Loihi to design an algorithm based on the olfactory circuit of the human brain. When the human smell something, molecules will stimulate the olfactory cells in their nose, which then sends signals to the olfactory system in the brain. Then the brain will fire off electrical pulses. The researchers managed to mimick that circuitry in the chip’s silicon circuits.

Intel said that Loihi can identify 10 smells such as methane, ammonia, acetone, even if there’re are strong smells around. Notably, the chip only learned a single sample of each odor. The researchers stressed that this is really impressive as other deep learning techniques may need up to 3,000 times as many training samples to be able to identify scents that accurately.

As stated by senior research scientist Nabil Imam at the neuromorphic computing group of Intel Lab, this research is an important instance of contemporary research existing at the crossroads of AI and neuroscience.

Nabil Imam says that this research is an important instance of contemporary research existing at the crossroads of AI and neuroscience

However, this is definitely not the only research group working on training AI to identify scents. At the same time, the Google Brain Team is also in work with perfumers to figure out the link between scent molecules and perceived smells. Meanwhile, Russian researchers are using artificial intelligence to sniff out fatal gas mixtures. Researchers have also attempted to recreate an extinct flower’s smell using machine learning.

According to Imam, by understanding how the neural circuits in the human brain solve such complex computational problems, we will be able to come up with prominent clues for robust and designing efficient machine learning, which essentially means this will change the way we design AI.

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