Abstract

The rapid advancement of photonic technologies has facilitated the development of photonic neurons that emulate neuronal functionalities akin to those observed in the human brain. Neuronal bursts frequently occur in behaviors where information is encoded and transmitted. Here, we present the demonstration of the bursting response activated by an artificial photonic neuron. This neuron utilizes a single vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL) and encodes multiple stimuli effectively by varying the spike count during a burst based on the polarization competition in the VCSEL. By virtue of the modulated optical injection in the VCSEL employed to trigger the spiking response, we activate bursts output in the VCSEL with a feedback structure in this scheme. The bursting response activated by the VCSEL-neuron exhibits neural signal characteristics, promising an excitation threshold and the refractory period. Significantly, this marks the inaugural implementation of a controllable integrated encoding scheme predicated on bursts within photonic neurons. There are two remarkable merits; on the one hand, the interspike interval of bursts is distinctly diminished, amounting to merely one twenty-fourth compared to that observed in optoelectronic oscillators. Moreover, the interspike period of bursts is about 70.8% shorter than the period of spikes activated by a VCSEL neuron without optical feedback. Our results may shed light on the analogy between optical and biological neurons and open the door to fast burst encoding-based optical systems with a speed several orders of magnitude faster than their biological counterparts.

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