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Collaborating Authors

 Onodera, Tatsuhiro


Training of Physical Neural Networks

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Physical neural networks (PNNs) are a class of neural-like networks that leverage the properties of physical systems to perform computation. While PNNs are so far a niche research area with small-scale laboratory demonstrations, they are arguably one of the most underappreciated important opportunities in modern AI. Could we train AI models 1000x larger than current ones? Could we do this and also have them perform inference locally and privately on edge devices, such as smartphones or sensors? Research over the past few years has shown that the answer to all these questions is likely "yes, with enough research": PNNs could one day radically change what is possible and practical for AI systems. To do this will however require rethinking both how AI models work, and how they are trained - primarily by considering the problems through the constraints of the underlying hardware physics. To train PNNs at large scale, many methods including backpropagation-based and backpropagation-free approaches are now being explored. These methods have various trade-offs, and so far no method has been shown to scale to the same scale and performance as the backpropagation algorithm widely used in deep learning today. However, this is rapidly changing, and a diverse ecosystem of training techniques provides clues for how PNNs may one day be utilized to create both more efficient realizations of current-scale AI models, and to enable unprecedented-scale models.


Scaling on-chip photonic neural processors using arbitrarily programmable wave propagation

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

On-chip photonic processors for neural networks have potential benefits in both speed and energy efficiency but have not yet reached the scale at which they can outperform electronic processors. The dominant paradigm for designing on-chip photonics is to make networks of relatively bulky discrete components connected by one-dimensional waveguides. A far more compact alternative is to avoid explicitly defining any components and instead sculpt the continuous substrate of the photonic processor to directly perform the computation using waves freely propagating in two dimensions. We propose and demonstrate a device whose refractive index as a function of space, $n(x,z)$, can be rapidly reprogrammed, allowing arbitrary control over the wave propagation in the device. Our device, a 2D-programmable waveguide, combines photoconductive gain with the electro-optic effect to achieve massively parallel modulation of the refractive index of a slab waveguide, with an index modulation depth of $10^{-3}$ and approximately $10^4$ programmable degrees of freedom. We used a prototype device with a functional area of $12\,\text{mm}^2$ to perform neural-network inference with up to 49-dimensional input vectors in a single pass, achieving 96% accuracy on vowel classification and 86% accuracy on $7 \times 7$-pixel MNIST handwritten-digit classification. This is a scale beyond that of previous photonic chips relying on discrete components, illustrating the benefit of the continuous-waves paradigm. In principle, with large enough chip area, the reprogrammability of the device's refractive index distribution enables the reconfigurable realization of any passive, linear photonic circuit or device. This promises the development of more compact and versatile photonic systems for a wide range of applications, including optical processing, smart sensing, spectroscopy, and optical communications.


Image sensing with multilayer, nonlinear optical neural networks

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Optical imaging is commonly used for both scientific and technological applications across industry and academia. In image sensing, a measurement, such as of an object's position, is performed by computational analysis of a digitized image. An emerging image-sensing paradigm breaks this delineation between data collection and analysis by designing optical components to perform not imaging, but encoding. By optically encoding images into a compressed, low-dimensional latent space suitable for efficient post-analysis, these image sensors can operate with fewer pixels and fewer photons, allowing higher-throughput, lower-latency operation. Optical neural networks (ONNs) offer a platform for processing data in the analog, optical domain. ONN-based sensors have however been limited to linear processing, but nonlinearity is a prerequisite for depth, and multilayer NNs significantly outperform shallow NNs on many tasks. Here, we realize a multilayer ONN pre-processor for image sensing, using a commercial image intensifier as a parallel optoelectronic, optical-to-optical nonlinear activation function. We demonstrate that the nonlinear ONN pre-processor can achieve compression ratios of up to 800:1 while still enabling high accuracy across several representative computer-vision tasks, including machine-vision benchmarks, flow-cytometry image classification, and identification of objects in real scenes. In all cases we find that the ONN's nonlinearity and depth allowed it to outperform a purely linear ONN encoder. Although our experiments are specialized to ONN sensors for incoherent-light images, alternative ONN platforms should facilitate a range of ONN sensors. These ONN sensors may surpass conventional sensors by pre-processing optical information in spatial, temporal, and/or spectral dimensions, potentially with coherent and quantum qualities, all natively in the optical domain.