As artificial intelligence has attracted interest, researchers are focused on understanding how the brain accomplishes cognition so they can construct systems with general intelligence comparable to humans' intelligence.
From:
American Institute of Physics
April 20, 2021 -- Researchers propose an
approach to AI that focuses on integrating photonic components with
superconducting electronics; using light for communication and complex electronic
circuits for computation could enable artificial cognitive systems of scale and
functionality beyond what can be achieved with either light or electronics
alone.
Many have approached this challenge by
using conventional silicon microelectronics in conjunction with light. However,
the fabrication of silicon chips with electronic and photonic circuit elements
is difficult for many physical and practical reasons related to the materials
used for the components.
In Applied Physics Letters,
by AIP Publishing, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and
Technology propose an approach to large-scale artificial intelligence that
focuses on integrating photonic components with superconducting electronics
rather than semiconducting electronics.
"We argue that by operating at low
temperature and using superconducting electronic circuits, single-photon
detectors, and silicon light sources, we will open a path toward rich
computational functionality and scalable fabrication," said author Jeffrey
Shainline.
Using light for communication in
conjunction with complex electronic circuits for computation could enable
artificial cognitive systems of scale and functionality beyond what can be
achieved with either light or electronics alone.
"What surprised me most was that
optoelectronic integration may be much easier when working at low temperatures
and using superconductors than when working at room temperatures and using
semiconductors," said Shainline.
Superconducting photon detectors enable
detection of a single photon, while semiconducting photon detectors require
about 1,000 photons. So not only do silicon light sources work at 4 kelvins,
but they also can be 1,000 times less bright than their room temperature
counterparts and still communicate effectively.
Some applications, such as chips in
cellphones, require working at room temperature, but the proposed technology
would still have wide reaching applicability for advanced computing systems.
The researchers plan to explore more
complex integration with other superconducting electronic circuits as well as
demonstrate all the components that comprise artificial cognitive systems,
including synapses and neurons.
Showing that the hardware can be
manufactured in a scalable manner, so large systems can be realized at a
reasonable cost, will also be important. Superconducting optoelectronic
integration could also help create scalable quantum technologies based on
superconducting or photonic qubits. Such quantum-neural hybrid systems may also
lead to new ways of leveraging the strengths of quantum entanglement with
spiking neurons.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/04/210420131057.htm
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