The battery-like hardware is built from two flexible films whose terminals are linked by a salty water electrolyte. It behaves like a transistor, with one terminal regulating the electricity flowing between two others. While it's not exactly natural, it's largely made out of carbon and hydrogen, and should be compatible with a real brain's chemistry -- the voltages are even the same as those that go through real neurons.

The ultimate aim is to create neural networks that exhibit more of the properties of their fleshy equivalents, and they've achieved some degree of success. There's only one synapse so far, but the team has shown that a simulated array of them could accomplish real computing tasks with a high degree of accuracy: the network could recognize handwritten numbers after training on three data sets. The biggest challenge is shrinking the synapse so that it achieves true synapse-like efficiency (they're still using 10,000 times more energy than a real synapse needs to fire). If scientists can get anywhere close to that, though, you could see neural networks that are not only low-power, but are safe enough to interact with real biology -- think AI-driven implants.