That's definitely not it but it's very difficult to find research (especially ongoing research is very rare) or even information on alternatives to the currently dominant (due to monopoly) von Neumann, binary, register machine, instruction-set-having, etc architectures.
You might try looking into dataflow, logic-based (like computers that do Prolog), or transport-triggered architectures. Or Lisp machines too.
That's definitely not it but it's very difficult to find research (especially ongoing research is very rare) or even information on alternatives to the currently dominant (due to monopoly) von Neumann, binary, register machine, instruction-set-having, etc architectures.
You might try looking into dataflow, logic-based (like computers that do Prolog), or transport-triggered architectures. Or Lisp machines too.