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Appeared on: Thursday, October 20, 2016
Fujitsu Develops New Architecture that Rivals Quantum Computers

Fujitsu Laboratories has collaborated with the University of Toronto to develop a new computing architecture to tackle a range of real-world issues by solving combinatorial optimization problems, which involve finding the best combination of elements out of an enormous set of element combinations.

In society, people need to make difficult decisions under such constraints as limited time and manpower. Examples of such decisions include determining procedures for disaster recovery, optimizing an investment portfolio, and formulating economic policy.

These kinds of decision-making problems--in which many elements are considered and evaluated, and the best combination of them needs to be chosen--are called combinatorial optimization problems. With combinatorial optimization problems, as the number of elements involved increases, the number of possible combinations increases exponentially, so in order to solve these problems quickly enough to be of any practical utility for society, there needs to be a dramatic increase in computing performance.

Conventional processors are very flexible in handling combinatorial optimization problems because they process these problems using software, but on the other hand, they cannot solve them quickly. On the other hand, current quantum computers can solve combinatorial optimization problems quickly, but because they solve problems based on a physical phenomenon, there is a limitation of only adjacent elements being able to come into contact, so currently they cannot handle a wide range of problems.

Fujitsu's new architecture employs conventional semiconductor technology with flexible circuit configurations to allow it to handle a broader range of problems than current quantum computing can manage. In addition, multiple computation circuits can be run in parallel to perform the optimization computations, enabling scalability in terms of problem size and processing speed.

Fujitsu Laboratories implemented a prototype of the architecture using FPGAs for the basic optimization circuit, which is the minimum constituent element of the architecture, and found the architecture capable of performing computations some 10,000 times faster than a conventional computer.

Fujitsu Laboratories is continuing to work on improving the architecture, and, by fiscal 2018, aims to have prototype computational systems able to handle real-world problems of 100,000 bits to one million bits that it will validate on the path toward practical implementation.

About the Technology

Using conventional semiconductors, Fujitsu Laboratories developed a new computing architecture able to quickly solve combinatorial optimization problems. This technology can handle a greater diversity of problems than quantum computing, and owing to its use of parallelization, the size of problems it can accommodate and its processing speed can be increased. Key features of the technology are as follows.

The architecture uses a basic optimization circuit, based on digital circuitry, as a building block. Multiple building blocks are driven, in parallel, in a hierarchical structure. This structure minimizes the volume of data that is moved between basic optimization circuits, making it is possible to implement them in parallel at high densities using conventional semiconductor technology. In addition, thanks to a fully connected structure that allows signals to move freely within and between basic optimization circuits, the architecture is able to handle a wide range of problems.

The basic optimization circuit uses techniques from probability theory to repeatedly search for paths from a given state to a more optimal state. This includes a technique that calculates scores for the respective evaluation results of multiple candidates at once, and in parallel, when there are multiple candidates for the next state, which increases the probability of finding the next state. It also includes a technique that, when a search process becomes stuck as it arrives at what is called a "local minimum," it detects this state and facilitates the transition to the next state by repeatedly adding a constant to score values that increases the probability of escaping from that state. As a result, one can quickly expect an optimal answer.



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