Skip to content
Engineering, Science

Tiny device promises new tech with a human touch

RMIT University 3 mins read

Engineers at RMIT University have invented a small ‘neuromorphic’ device that detects hand movement, stores memories and processes information like a human brain, without the need for an external computer.

Team leader Professor Sumeet Walia said the innovation marked a step towards enabling instant visual processing in autonomous vehicles, advanced robotics and other next-generation applications for improved human interaction.

“Neuromorphic vision systems are designed to use similar analogue processing to our brains, which can greatly reduce the amount of energy needed to perform complex visual tasks compared with digital technologies used today,” said Walia, Director of the RMIT Centre for Opto-electronic Materials and Sensors (COMAS).

The work brings together neuromorphic materials and advanced signal processing led by Professor Akram Al-Hourani, who is Deputy Director of COMAS.

The device contains a metal compound known as molybdenum disulfide, or MoS2.

In their latest study, the team showed how atomic-scale defects in this compound can be harnessed to capture light and process it as electrical signals, like how neurons work in our brain.

“This proof-of-concept device mimics the human eye’s ability to capture light and the brain’s ability to process that visual information, enabling it to sense a change in the environment instantly and make memories without the need for using huge amounts of data and energy,” Walia said.

“Current digital systems, by contrast, are very power hungry and unable to keep up as data volume and complexity increases, which limits their ability to make ‘true’ real-time decisions.”

The research is published in Advanced Materials Technologies. Walia and Al-Hourani are corresponding authors and Mr Thiha Aung, a PhD scholar at RMIT, is first author.

RMIT has filed a provisional patent for the work.

Seeing the future in the wave of a hand

During experiments, the device detected changes in a waving hand’s movement, without the need to capture the events frame by frame – this is known as edge detection, which requires significantly less data processing and power.  

Once the changes were detected, the device stored these events as memories like a brain.

The researchers conducted experiments in the spectrum visible to the human eye, which built upon the team’s previous neuromorphic research in the ultraviolet domain.

“We demonstrated that atomically thin molybdenum disulfide can accurately replicate the leaky integrate-and-fire (LIF) neuron behaviour, a fundamental building block of spiking neural networks,” Thiha said.

The past UV work only involved the detection, memory making and processing of still images. In both the visible-spectrum and UV devices, memories could be reset so that devices were ready to perform the next task.

Potential applications

The team’s innovation could one day improve response times of automated vehicles and advanced robotic systems to visual information, which could be crucial particularly in dangerous and unpredictable environments.

“Neuromorphic vision in these applications, which is still many years away, could detect changes in a scene almost instantly, without the need to process lots of data, enabling a much faster response that could save lives,” Walia said.

“For robots working closely with humans in manufacturing or as a personal assistant, neuromorphic technology could enable more natural interactions by recognising and reacting to human behaviour with minimal delay,” Al-Hourani said.

Next steps

The team is now scaling up the proof-of-concept single-pixel device to a larger pixel array of MoS2-based devices.

The Australian Research Council has recently funded the team with a Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities (LIEF) grant to enable this scaling up of their neuromorphic devices.

“While our system mimics certain aspects of the brain’s neural processing, particularly in vision, it's still a simplified model,” Walia said.

“We will optimise the devices to perform specific real-world applications with more complex vision tasks, and further reduce power consumption.”

The team plans to develop hybrid systems that integrate their analogue technology with conventional digital electronics.

“We see our work as complementary to traditional computing, rather than a replacement,” Walia said.

“Conventional systems excel at many tasks, while our neuromorphic technology offers advantages for visual processing where energy efficiency and real-time operation are critical.”

The team is also investigating materials other than MoS2 that might extend capabilities into infrared, which could enable real-time tracking of global emissions and intelligent sensing of contaminants such as toxic gases, pathogens and chemicals.

Photoactive monolayer MoS2 for spiking neural networks enabled machine vision applications’ is published in Advanced Materials Technologies (DOI: 10.1002/admt.202401677).

MULTIMEDIA AVAILABLE

Photos of the team and the neuromorphic vision device are available for download here: https://spaces.hightail.com/space/r7657uHgZL


Contact details:

To arrange interviews or for other media assistance, contact Will Wright on +61 417 510 735 or +61 3 9925 6385 or at [email protected]

Note: I will be on leave from Wednesday 14 May 2025 and will return to work on Monday 23 June 2025. If you need assistance when I am on leave, please contact Michael Quin at [email protected] (cc: [email protected]) or call the media phone on +61 439 704 077.

Media

More from this category

  • Research Development, Science
  • 14/01/2026
  • 14:00
Climate Council

Bronze Medal Nobody Wants: 2025 Earth’s Third-Hottest Year

January 14 2026 New data from Europe’s leading climate agency shows 2025 was just 0.13°C away from being the hottest year on record, underscoring…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Science
  • 14/01/2026
  • 13:00
Climate Media Centre

TALENT ALERT: Copernicus Climate Report reveals 2025 one of the hottest years on record

14 Jan 2026 New global climate data released today by the Copernicus Climate Change Service confirms that 2025 was among the hottest years ever recorded, marked by extreme heat, oceanic warming and escalating climate impacts driven by the burning of fossil fuels. Climate scientists and frontline experts say the findings confirm climate change is not a future threat, but a present and accelerating crisis that is already reshaping lives, ecosystems and economies across the globe. The Copernicus Global Climate Highlights report shows 2025 continued a pattern of rising global temperatures, intensifying heatwaves, worsening bushfire conditions and compounding impacts on cities,…

  • Biotechnology, Science
  • 14/01/2026
  • 09:30
OmnigeniQ

Australian start-up unveils world-first physics model to visualise human proteins

Australian companyOmnigeniQ has revealed the first computer model of a human protein as it exists in the body, confirming that native protein topology can be calculated directly from physics. The breakthrough was achieved using the company’s physics-based Deterministic Intelligence model that shows proteins in their native, hydrated, dynamic form – something existing tools cannot do. This milestone supports OmnigeniQ’s mission to build the world’s first holographic twin of the human body, enabling more preventative, predictive and precise medicine. OmnigeniQ has unveiled a world-first scientific milestone at Biotech Showcase in San Francisco, demonstrating the first deterministic computation of Cyclin-dependent kinase 5…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.