The Air Force Research Laboratory has built the world’s largest neuromorphic digital synaptic supercomputer, using IBM’s TrueNorth technology.

Blue Raven, installed at AFRL’s Information Directorate Advanced Computing Applications Lab in Rome, New York, is the culmination of a partnership between the Air Force’s R&D division and IBM that was announced last year.

SyNAPSE’s child

Blue Raven
– AFRL

AFRL claims the new supercomputer has a processing power that is equivalent to 64 million neurons and 16 billion synapses, while only consuming 40 watts. The system fits in a 4U-high (7in) space in a standard server rack.

“AFRL was the earliest adopter of TrueNorth for converting data into decisions,” Daniel S. Goddard, director of information directorate at AFRL, said in 2017.

“The new neurosynaptic system will be used to enable new computing capabilities important to AFRL’s mission to explore, prototype and demonstrate high-impact, game-changing technologies that enable the Air Force and the nation to maintain its superior technical advantage.”

TrueNorth chips were originally launched in 2014 after several years of research as part of DARPA’s $53.5 million SyNAPSE (Systems of Neuromorphic Adaptive Plastic Scalable Electronics) program.

In 2016, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and IBM collaborated on a TrueNorth machine to help the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) in its core missions of cybersecurity and stewardship of the US’ nuclear weapons stockpile, and promotion of nonproliferation.

Blue Raven’s project manager is Mark Barnell, who also led AFRL’s PlayStation 3 Condor Cluster, while the system’s principal computer scientist is Dr. Qing Wu.

AFRL notes that it is currently investigating applications for the technology, but highlighted pattern recognition and integrated sensory processing, as well as the challenge of autonomous systems.

We talked to the head of IBM's TrueNorth project, Dr Dharmendra S. Modha, as well as several other neuromorphic computing leaders - including Professor Steve Furber, Professor Karlheinz Meier, and the founder of the field, Carver Mead - for the cover feature of the October/November issue of DCD>Magazine