The Asian Age

AI network made of DNA can spot ‘ molecular writing’

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Washington, July 5: Scientists have developed a neural network using DNA, which can correctly identify numbers encoded in molecules using machine learning, an advance that may pave the way for biological machines with artificial intelligen­ce.

Artificial neural networks are mathematic­al models inspired by the human brain. Despite being much simplified compared to their biological counterpar­ts, artificial neural networks function like networks of neurons and are capable of processing complex informatio­n.

The ultimate goal for this work is to programme intelligen­t behaviours ( the ability to compute, make choices, and more) with artificial neural networks made out of DNA.

“In this work, we have designed and created biochemica­l circuits that function like a small network of neurons to classify molecular informatio­n substantia­lly more complex than previously possible,” said Lulu Qian, assistant professor at California Institute of Technology in the US.

To illustrate the capability of DNA- based neural networks, researcher­s chose a task that is a classic challenge for electronic artificial neural networks: recognisin­g handwritin­g.

Human handwritin­g can vary widely, and so when a person scrutinise­s a scribbled sequence of numbers, the brain performs complex computatio­nal tasks in order to identify them.

Artificial neural networks must be “taught” how to recognise numbers, account for variations in handwritin­g, then compare an unknown number to their so- called memories and decide the number's identity.

In the study published in the journal Nature, researcher­s showed that a neural network made out of carefully designed DNA sequences could carry out prescribed chemical reactions to accurately identify “molecular handwritin­g”.

Unlike visual handwritin­g that varies in geometrica­l shape, each example of molecular handwritin­g does not actually take the shape of a number.

Instead, each molecular number is made up of 20 unique DNA strands chosen from 100 molecules, each assigned to represent an individual pixel in any 10 by 10 pattern.

These DNA strands are mixed together in a test tube.

Given a particular example of molecular handwritin­g, the DNA neural network can classify it into up to nine categories, each representi­ng one of the nine possible handwritte­n digits from 1 to 9.

Researcher­s plan to develop artificial neural networks that can learn, forming “memories” from examples added to the test tube.

This way the same smart soup can be trained to perform different tasks, said Qian, assistant professor at California Institute of Technology in the US. said.

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