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High-performance real-world optical computing trained by in situ gradient-based model-free optimization

Optics 2024-11-22 v6 Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Emerging Technologies Machine Learning

Abstract

Optical computing systems provide high-speed and low-energy data processing but face deficiencies in computationally demanding training and simulation-to-reality gaps. We propose a gradient-based model-free optimization (G-MFO) method based on a Monte Carlo gradient estimation algorithm for computationally efficient in situ training of optical computing systems. This approach treats an optical computing system as a black box and back-propagates the loss directly to the optical computing weights' probability distributions, circumventing the need for a computationally heavy and biased system simulation. Our experiments on diffractive optical computing systems show that G-MFO outperforms hybrid training on the MNIST and FMNIST datasets. Furthermore, we demonstrate image-free and high-speed classification of cells from their marker-free phase maps. Our method's model-free and high-performance nature, combined with its low demand for computational resources, paves the way for accelerating the transition of optical computing from laboratory demonstrations to practical, real-world applications.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2307.11957,
  title  = {High-performance real-world optical computing trained by in situ gradient-based model-free optimization},
  author = {Guangyuan Zhao and Xin Shu and Renjie Zhou},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2307.11957},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

The paper titled "High-performance real-world optical computing trained by in situ gradient-based model-free optimization" has been accepted at ICCP&TPAMI 2024. For more details, please visit the [project page](https://shuxin626.github.io/mfo_optical_computing/index.html)

R2 v1 2026-06-28T11:37:29.559Z