Bird's-eye view on noise-based logic

Int J Mod Phys Conf Ser. 2014:33:1460363. doi: 10.1142/S2010194514603639.

Abstract

Noise-based logic is a practically deterministic logic scheme inspired by the randomness of neural spikes and uses a system of uncorrelated stochastic processes and their superposition to represent the logic state. We briefly discuss various questions such as (i) What does practical determinism mean? (ii) Is noise-based logic a Turing machine? (iii) Is there hope to beat (the dreams of) quantum computation by a classical physical noise-based processor, and what are the minimum hardware requirements for that? Finally, (iv) we address the problem of random number generators and show that the common belief that quantum number generators are superior to classical (thermal) noise-based generators is nothing but a myth.

Keywords: Brain; Classical versus quantum random number generators; Computational complexity; Probabilistic Turing machine.