An optical neural chip for implementing complex-valued neural network

Complex-valued neural networks have many advantages over their real-valued counterparts. Conventional digital electronic computing platforms are incapable of executing truly complex-valued representations and operations. In contrast, optical computing platforms that encode information in both phase...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhang, Hui, Gu, Mile, Jiang, Xudong, Thompson, Jayne, Cai, Hong, Paesani‬‪, Stefano, Santagati, ‪Raffaele, Laing, ‪Anthony, Zhang, Yi, Yung, Man Hong, Shi, Yuzhi, Muhammad Faeyz Karim, Lo, Guo Qiang, Luo, Xian Shu, Dong, Bin, Kwong, Dim Lee, Kwek, Leong Chuan, Liu, Ai Qun
Other Authors: School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/151455
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
Description
Summary:Complex-valued neural networks have many advantages over their real-valued counterparts. Conventional digital electronic computing platforms are incapable of executing truly complex-valued representations and operations. In contrast, optical computing platforms that encode information in both phase and magnitude can execute complex arithmetic by optical interference, offering significantly enhanced computational speed and energy efficiency. However, to date, most demonstrations of optical neural networks still only utilize conventional real-valued frameworks that are designed for digital computers, forfeiting many of the advantages of optical computing such as efficient complex-valued operations. In this article, we highlight an optical neural chip (ONC) that implements truly complex-valued neural networks. We benchmark the performance of our complex-valued ONC in four settings: simple Boolean tasks, species classification of an Iris dataset, classifying nonlinear datasets (Circle and Spiral), and handwriting recognition. Strong learning capabilities (i.e., high accuracy, fast convergence and the capability to construct nonlinear decision boundaries) are achieved by our complex-valued ONC compared to its real-valued counterpart.