Wykaz publikacji wybranego autora

Dawid Przyczyna, mgr inż.

doktorant

Wydział Fizyki i Informatyki Stosowanej
WFiIS, Wydział Fizyki i Informatyki Stosowanej


Identyfikatory Autora

ORCID: brak

ResearcherID: brak

Scopus: 57201277213





Liczba pozycji spełniających powyższe kryteria selekcji: 22, z ogólnej liczby 22 publikacji Autora


1
  • Bismuth triiodide complexes: structure, spectroscopy, electronic properties, and memristive properties
2
3
  • Communication, information, energy, and music
4
5
  • Electrical frequency discrimination by fungi \emph{Pleurotus Ostreatus}
6
  • From oscillatory reactions to robotics: a serendipitous journey through chemistry, physics and computation
7
  • Hardware realization of the pattern recognition with an artificial neuromorphic device exhibiting a short-term memory
8
  • Heavy pnictogen chalcohalides: the synthesis, structure and properties of these rediscovered semiconductors
9
  • \emph{In-materio} neuromimetic devices: dynamics, information processing and pattern recognition
10
  • Jak nauczyć siarczek kadmu rozpoznawać cyfry?
11
  • KNOWM memristors in a bridge synapse delay-based reservoir computing system for detection of epileptic seizures
12
  • Molecules, semiconductors, light and information: towards future sensing and computing paradigms
13
  • New approaches towards chemosensing
14
  • On buildings that compute
15
  • Photo-enhanced memristive effects realised in nanograined chrome yellow pigment
16
  • Recognition of musical dissonance and consonance in a simple neuromorphic computing system
17
  • Reservoir computing for sensing - an experimental approach
18
  • The memristive properties and spike timing-dependent plasticity in electrodeposited copper tungstates and molybdates
19
  • Towards embedded computation with building materials
20
  • Towards synthetic neural networks: can artificial electrochemical neurons be coupled with artificial memristive synapses?
21
  • Unusual consequence of charge carrier trapping in semiconducting nanostructures
22
  • Unusual photoelectrochemistry observed in photocatalytic XIX century yellow pigment