'A Single Optical Fiber':

Scientists build a silicon-less computer that use light waves and surpasses 
existing systems for classification — could this be the ultimate AI CPU?

By Wayne Williams, published about 23 hours ago
https://www.techradar.com/pro/a-single-optical-fiber-scientists-build-a-silicon-less-computer-that-use-light-waves-and-surpasses-existing-systems-for-classification-could-this-be-the-ultimate-ai-cpu


In an era where the ecological footprint of large-scale AI systems is 
increasingly being scrutinized, a team of international scientists has 
developed a potentially game-changing new solution.

The team, led by Prof. Mario Chemnitz and Dr. Bennet Fischer from the Leibniz 
Institute of Photonic Technology in Jena, have built a computer that uses light 
waves instead of silicon, and it's all done through a single optical fiber.

The researchers have leveraged the unique interactions of light waves within 
optical fibers to create an advanced artificial learning system.

This clever method eliminates the need for extensive electronic infrastructure, 
which is a marked departure from traditional systems that rely on computer 
chips containing thousands of electronic components.

"We utilize a single optical fiber to mimic the computational power of numerous 
neural networks," explains Prof. Chemnitz.

"By leveraging the unique physical properties of light, this system will enable 
the rapid and efficient processing of vast amounts of data in the future."

As Tech Xplore explains, data, whether pixel values from images or frequency 
components of an audio track, are encoded onto the color channels of ultrashort 
light pulses.

https://techxplore.com/news/2024-02-neural-networks-team-ai-optical.html

These pulses carry the information through the fiber, undergoing various 
combinations, amplifications, or attenuations. The emergence of new color 
combinations at the fiber's output enables the prediction of data types or 
contexts.

It's been used to diagnose COVID-19 infections from voice samples

The team has successfully applied this method in a pilot study to diagnose 
COVID-19 infections using voice samples supplied by the University of 
Cambridge. The results achieved a detection rate that surpasses the best 
digital systems to date.

"We are the first to demonstrate that such a vibrant interplay of light waves 
in optical fibers can directly classify complex information without any 
additional intelligent software," Prof. Chemnitz said.

The paper has been published in Advanced Science:

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/advs.202303835

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