The
rapid development of artificial intelligence techniques and
future advanced robot systems sparks emergent demand on the accurate
perception and understanding of the external environments via visual sensing systems that can co-locate the self-adaptive
detecting, processing, and memorizing of optical signals. In this
contribution, a simple indium–tin oxide/Nb-doped SrTiO3 (ITO/Nb:SrTiO3) heterojunction artificial optoelectronic
synapse is proposed and demonstrated. Through the light and electric
field co-modulation of the Schottky barrier profile at the ITO/Nb:SrTiO3 interface, the oxide heterojunction device can respond to
the entire visible light region in a neuromorphic manner, allowing
synaptic paired-pulse facilitation, short/long-term memory, and “learning-experience”
behavior for optical information manipulation. More importantly, the
photoplasticity of the artificial synapse has been modulated by heterosynaptic
means with a sub-1 V external voltage, not only enabling an optoelectronic
analog of the mechanical aperture device showing adaptive and stable
optical perception capability under different illuminating conditions
but also making the artificial synapse suitable for the mimicry of
interest-modulated human visual memories.
One of the challenges that restricts the evolving extracellular vesicle (EV) research field is the lack of a consensus method for EV separation. This may also explain the diversity of the experimental results, as co‐separated soluble proteins and lipoproteins may impede the interpretation of experimental findings. In this study, we comprehensively evaluated the EV yields and sample purities of three most popular EV separation methods, ultracentrifugation, precipitation and size exclusion chromatography combined with ultrafiltration, along with a microfluidic tangential flow filtration device, Exodisc, in three commonly used biological samples, cell culture medium, human urine and plasma. Single EV phenotyping and density‐gradient ultracentrifugation were used to understand the proportion of true EVs in particle separations. Our findings suggest Exodisc has the best EV yield though it may co‐separate contaminants when the non‐EV particle levels are high in input materials. We found no 100% pure EV preparations due to the overlap of their size and density with many non‐EV particles in biofluids. Precipitation has the lowest sample purity, regardless of sample type. The purities of the other techniques may vary in different sample types and are largely dependent on their working principles and the intrinsic composition of the input sample. Researchers should choose the proper separation method according to the sample type, downstream analysis and their working scenarios.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.