Toward optical signal processing using photonic reservoir computing.

Kristof Vandoorne, Wouter Dierckx, Benjamin Schrauwen, David Verstraeten, Roel Baets, Peter Bienstman, Jan Van Campenhout
Author Information
  1. Kristof Vandoorne: Dept. of Information Technology, Photonics Research Group, Ghent University-IMEC, Gent, Belgium. Kristof.Vandoorne@UGent.be

Abstract

We propose photonic reservoir computing as a new approach to optical signal processing in the context of large scale pattern recognition problems. Photonic reservoir computing is a photonic implementation of the recently proposed reservoir computing concept, where the dynamics of a network of nonlinear elements are exploited to perform general signal processing tasks. In our proposed photonic implementation, we employ a network of coupled Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers (SOA) as the basic building blocks for the reservoir. Although they differ in many key respects from traditional software-based hyperbolic tangent reservoirs, we show using simulations that such a photonic reservoir can outperform traditional reservoirs on a benchmark classification task. Moreover, a photonic implementation offers the promise of massively parallel information processing with low power and high speed.

MeSH Term

Computer Simulation
Computer-Aided Design
Equipment Design
Equipment Failure Analysis
Light
Models, Theoretical
Neural Networks, Computer
Optics and Photonics
Photons
Scattering, Radiation
Semiconductors
Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0photonicreservoircomputingprocessingsignalimplementationopticalproposednetworktraditionalreservoirsusingproposenewapproachcontextlargescalepatternrecognitionproblemsPhotonicrecentlyconceptdynamicsnonlinearelementsexploitedperformgeneraltasksemploycoupledSemiconductorOpticalAmplifiersSOAbasicbuildingblocksAlthoughdiffermanykeyrespectssoftware-basedhyperbolictangentshowsimulationscanoutperformbenchmarkclassificationtaskMoreoverofferspromisemassivelyparallelinformationlowpowerhighspeedToward

Similar Articles

Cited By