The authors report an ONN with >90% accuracy image classification using <1 detected photon per scalar multiplication, and shows that optical neural networks can achieve accurate results using extremely low optical energies.
Deep learning has become a widespread tool in both science and industry. However, continued progress is hampered by the rapid growth in energy costs of ever-larger deep neural networks. Optical neural networks provide a potential means to solve the energy-cost problem faced by deep learning. Here, we experimentally demonstrate an optical neural network based on optical dot products that achieves 99% accuracy on handwritten-digit classification using ~3.1 detected photons per weight multiplication and ~90% accuracy using ~0.66 photons (~2.5 × 10−19 J of optical energy) per weight multiplication. The fundamental principle enabling our sub-photon-per-multiplication demonstration—noise reduction from the accumulation of scalar multiplications in dot-product sums—is applicable to many different optical-neural-network architectures. Our work shows that optical neural networks can achieve accurate results using extremely low optical energies. Though theory suggests that highly energy efficient optical neural networks (ONNs) based on optical matrix-vector multipliers are possible, an experimental validation is lacking. Here, the authors report an ONN with >90% accuracy image classification using <1 detected photon per scalar multiplication.
Brian C. Richard
1 papers
P. McMahon
1 papers