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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 3671, 2024 Apr 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38693108

RESUMEN

Ising machines, which are hardware implementations of the Ising model of coupled spins, have been influential in the development of unsupervised learning algorithms at the origins of Artificial Intelligence (AI). However, their application to AI has been limited due to the complexities in matching supervised training methods with Ising machine physics, even though these methods are essential for achieving high accuracy. In this study, we demonstrate an efficient approach to train Ising machines in a supervised way through the Equilibrium Propagation algorithm, achieving comparable results to software-based implementations. We employ the quantum annealing procedure of the D-Wave Ising machine to train a fully-connected neural network on the MNIST dataset. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the machine's connectivity supports convolution operations, enabling the training of a compact convolutional network with minimal spins per neuron. Our findings establish Ising machines as a promising trainable hardware platform for AI, with the potential to enhance machine learning applications.

2.
Neuron ; 112(2): 180-183, 2024 Jan 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38086371

RESUMEN

Human brains and bodies are not hardware running software: the hardware is the software. We reason that because the physics of artificial intelligence hardware and of human biological "hardware" is distinct, neuromorphic engineers need to be selective in the inspiration we take from neuroscience.


Asunto(s)
Inteligencia Artificial , Neurociencias , Humanos , Computadores , Programas Informáticos , Encéfalo
3.
Res Sq ; 2023 Oct 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37961369

RESUMEN

A practical limit to energy efficiency in computation is ultimately from noise, with quantum noise [1] as the fundamental floor. Analog physical neural networks [2], which hold promise for improved energy efficiency and speed compared to digital electronic neural networks, are nevertheless typically operated in a relatively high-power regime so that the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is large (>10). We study optical neural networks [3] operated in the limit where all layers except the last use only a single photon to cause a neuron activation. In this regime, activations are dominated by quantum noise from the fundamentally probabilistic nature of single-photon detection. We show that it is possible to perform accurate machine-learning inference in spite of the extremely high noise (signal-to-noise ratio ~ 1). We experimentally demonstrated MNIST handwritten-digit classification with a test accuracy of 98% using an optical neural network with a hidden layer operating in the single-photon regime; the optical energy used to perform the classification corresponds to 0.008 photons per multiply-accumulate (MAC) operation, which is equivalent to 0.003 attojoules of optical energy per MAC. Our experiment also used >40× fewer photons per inference than previous state-of-the-art low-optical-energy demonstrations [4, 5] to achieve the same accuracy of >90%. Our training approach, which directly models the system's stochastic behavior, might also prove useful with non-optical ultra-low-power hardware.

4.
iScience ; 24(3): 102222, 2021 Mar 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33748709

RESUMEN

Finding spike-based learning algorithms that can be implemented within the local constraints of neuromorphic systems, while achieving high accuracy, remains a formidable challenge. Equilibrium propagation is a promising alternative to backpropagation as it only involves local computations, but hardware-oriented studies have so far focused on rate-based networks. In this work, we develop a spiking neural network algorithm called EqSpike, compatible with neuromorphic systems, which learns by equilibrium propagation. Through simulations, we obtain a test recognition accuracy of 97.6% on the MNIST handwritten digits dataset (Mixed National Institute of Standards and Technology), similar to rate-based equilibrium propagation, and comparing favorably to alternative learning techniques for spiking neural networks. We show that EqSpike implemented in silicon neuromorphic technology could reduce the energy consumption of inference and training, respectively, by three orders and two orders of magnitude compared to graphics processing units. Finally, we also show that during learning, EqSpike weight updates exhibit a form of spike-timing-dependent plasticity, highlighting a possible connection with biology.

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