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105
result(s) for
"variational quantum circuits"
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Quantum machine learning: from physics to software engineering
by
Lee, Ray-Kuang
,
Kordzanganeh, Mohammad
,
Alodjants, Alexander
in
Algorithms
,
Artificial intelligence
,
Data processing
2023
Quantum machine learning is a rapidly growing field at the intersection of quantum technology and artificial intelligence. This review provides a two-fold overview of several key approaches that can offer advancements in both the development of quantum technologies and the power of artificial intelligence. Among these approaches are quantum-enhanced algorithms, which apply quantum software engineering to classical information processing to improve keystone machine learning solutions. In this context, we explore the capability of hybrid quantum-classical neural networks to improve model generalization and increase accuracy while reducing computational resources. We also illustrate how machine learning can be used both to mitigate the effects of errors on presently available noisy intermediate-scale quantum devices, and to understand quantum advantage via an automatic study of quantum walk processes on graphs. In addition, we review how quantum hardware can be enhanced by applying machine learning to fundamental and applied physics problems as well as quantum tomography and photonics. We aim to demonstrate how concepts in physics can be translated into practical engineering of machine learning solutions using quantum software.
Journal Article
Federated Quantum Machine Learning
2021
Distributed training across several quantum computers could significantly improve the training time and if we could share the learned model, not the data, it could potentially improve the data privacy as the training would happen where the data is located. One of the potential schemes to achieve this property is the federated learning (FL), which consists of several clients or local nodes learning on their own data and a central node to aggregate the models collected from those local nodes. However, to the best of our knowledge, no work has been done in quantum machine learning (QML) in federation setting yet. In this work, we present the federated training on hybrid quantum-classical machine learning models although our framework could be generalized to pure quantum machine learning model. Specifically, we consider the quantum neural network (QNN) coupled with classical pre-trained convolutional model. Our distributed federated learning scheme demonstrated almost the same level of trained model accuracies and yet significantly faster distributed training. It demonstrates a promising future research direction for scaling and privacy aspects.
Journal Article
Quantum Machine Learning: A Review and Case Studies
by
Quafafou, Mohamed
,
Zeguendry, Amine
,
Jarir, Zahi
in
Algorithms
,
Artificial intelligence
,
Artificial neural networks
2023
Despite its undeniable success, classical machine learning remains a resource-intensive process. Practical computational efforts for training state-of-the-art models can now only be handled by high speed computer hardware. As this trend is expected to continue, it should come as no surprise that an increasing number of machine learning researchers are investigating the possible advantages of quantum computing. The scientific literature on Quantum Machine Learning is now enormous, and a review of its current state that can be comprehended without a physics background is necessary. The objective of this study is to present a review of Quantum Machine Learning from the perspective of conventional techniques. Departing from giving a research path from fundamental quantum theory through Quantum Machine Learning algorithms from a computer scientist’s perspective, we discuss a set of basic algorithms for Quantum Machine Learning, which are the fundamental components for Quantum Machine Learning algorithms. We implement the Quanvolutional Neural Networks (QNNs) on a quantum computer to recognize handwritten digits, and compare its performance to that of its classical counterpart, the Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). Additionally, we implement the QSVM on the breast cancer dataset and compare it to the classical SVM. Finally, we implement the Variational Quantum Classifier (VQC) and many classical classifiers on the Iris dataset to compare their accuracies.
Journal Article
Variational quantum reinforcement learning via evolutionary optimization
by
Chen, Samuel Yen-Chi
,
Huang, Chih-Min
,
Goan, Hsi-Sheng
in
Amplitudes
,
artificial intelligence
,
Cart-pole problem
2022
Recent advances in classical reinforcement learning (RL) and quantum computation point to a promising direction for performing RL on a quantum computer. However, potential applications in quantum RL are limited by the number of qubits available in modern quantum devices. Here, we present two frameworks for deep quantum RL tasks using gradient-free evolutionary optimization. First, we apply the amplitude encoding scheme to the Cart-Pole problem, where we demonstrate the quantum advantage of parameter saving using amplitude encoding. Second, we propose a hybrid framework where the quantum RL agents are equipped with a hybrid tensor network-variational quantum circuit (TN-VQC) architecture to handle inputs of dimensions exceeding the number of qubits. This allows us to perform quantum RL in the MiniGrid environment with 147-dimensional inputs. The hybrid TN-VQC architecture provides a natural way to perform efficient compression of the input dimension, enabling further quantum RL applications on noisy intermediate-scale quantum devices.
Journal Article
Quantum machine learning in high energy physics
2021
Machine learning has been used in high energy physics (HEP) for a long time, primarily at the analysis level with supervised classification. Quantum computing was postulated in the early 1980s as way to perform computations that would not be tractable with a classical computer. With the advent of noisy intermediate-scale quantum computing devices, more quantum algorithms are being developed with the aim at exploiting the capacity of the hardware for machine learning applications. An interesting question is whether there are ways to apply quantum machine learning to HEP. This paper reviews the first generation of ideas that use quantum machine learning on problems in HEP and provide an outlook on future applications.
Journal Article
A comparative analysis of classical machine learning models with quantum-inspired models for predicting world surface temperature
by
Pradhan, Sunil Kumar
,
Ravalekar, Vishvajeet
,
Pandey, Trilok Nath
in
639/166
,
639/4077
,
Accuracy
2025
This research paper delves into the realm of quantum machine learning (QML) by conducting a comprehensive study on time-series data. The primary objective is to compare the results and time complexity of classical machine learning algorithms on traditional hardware to their quantum counterparts on quantum computers. As the amount and complexity of time-series data in numerous fields continues to expand, the investigation of advanced computational models becomes critical for efficient analysis and prediction. We employ a time-series dataset that include temperature records from different nations throughout the world spanning the previous half of the century. The study compares the performance of classical machine learning algorithms to quantum algorithms, which use the concepts of superposition and entanglement to handle subtle temporal patterns in time-series data. This study attempts to reveal the different benefits and drawbacks of quantum machine learning in the time-series domain through rigorous empirical analysis. The findings of this study not only help to comprehend the applicability of quantum algorithms in real-world contexts, but they also open the way for future advances in utilizing quantum computing for increased time-series analysis and prediction. This study’s findings could have ramifications in industries ranging from finance to healthcare, where precise forecasting using time-series data is critical for informed decision-making.
Journal Article
Remote Sensing Image Scene Classification in Hybrid Classical–Quantum Transferring CNN with Small Samples
2023
The scope of this research lies in the combination of pre-trained Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) and Quantum Convolutional Neural Networks (QCNN) in application to Remote Sensing Image Scene Classification(RSISC). Deep learning (RL) is improving by leaps and bounds pretrained CNNs in Remote Sensing Image (RSI) analysis, and pre-trained CNNs have shown remarkable performance in remote sensing image scene classification (RSISC). Nonetheless, CNNs training require massive, annotated data as samples. When labeled samples are not sufficient, the most common solution is using pre-trained CNNs with a great deal of natural image datasets (e.g., ImageNet). However, these pre-trained CNNs require a large quantity of labelled data for training, which is often not feasible in RSISC, especially when the target RSIs have different imaging mechanisms from RGB natural images. In this paper, we proposed an improved hybrid classical–quantum transfer learning CNNs composed of classical and quantum elements to classify open-source RSI dataset. The classical part of the model is made up of a ResNet network which extracts useful features from RSI datasets. To further refine the network performance, a tensor quantum circuit is subsequently employed by tuning parameters on near-term quantum processors. We tested our models on the open-source RSI dataset. In our comparative study, we have concluded that the hybrid classical–quantum transferring CNN has achieved better performance than other pre-trained CNNs based RSISC methods with small training samples. Moreover, it has been proven that the proposed algorithm improves the classification accuracy while greatly decreasing the amount of model parameters and the sum of training data.
Journal Article
An end-to-end trainable hybrid classical-quantum classifier
by
Chen, Samuel Yen-Chi
,
Huang, Chih-Min
,
Hsing, Chia-Wei
in
Circuits
,
Cognitive tasks
,
Feature extraction
2021
We introduce a hybrid model combining a quantum-inspired tensor network and a variational quantum circuit to perform supervised learning tasks. This architecture allows for the classical and quantum parts of the model to be trained simultaneously, providing an end-to-end training framework. We show that compared to the principal component analysis, a tensor network based on the matrix product state with low bond dimensions performs better as a feature extractor for the input data of the variational quantum circuit in the binary and ternary classification of MNIST and Fashion-MNIST datasets. The architecture is highly adaptable and the classical-quantum boundary can be adjusted according to the availability of the quantum resource by exploiting the correspondence between tensor networks and quantum circuits.
Journal Article
HQRNN-FD: A Hybrid Quantum Recurrent Neural Network for Fraud Detection
2025
Detecting financial fraud is a critical aspect of modern intelligent financial systems. Despite the advances brought by deep learning in predictive accuracy, challenges persist—particularly in capturing complex, high-dimensional nonlinear features. This study introduces a novel hybrid quantum recurrent neural network for fraud detection (HQRNN-FD). The model utilizes variational quantum circuits (VQCs) incorporating angle encoding, data reuploading, and hierarchical entanglement to project transaction features into quantum state spaces, thereby facilitating quantum-enhanced feature extraction. For sequential analysis, the model integrates a recurrent neural network (RNN) with a self-attention mechanism to effectively capture temporal dependencies and uncover latent fraudulent patterns. To mitigate class imbalance, the synthetic minority over-sampling technique (SMOTE) is employed during preprocessing, enhancing both class representation and model generalizability. Experimental evaluations reveal that HQRNN-FD attains an accuracy of 0.972 on publicly available fraud detection datasets, outperforming conventional models by 2.4%. In addition, the framework exhibits robustness against quantum noise and improved predictive performance with increasing qubit numbers, validating its efficacy and scalability for imbalanced financial classification tasks.
Journal Article
Federated Quantum Machine Learning for Distributed Cybersecurity in Multi-Agent Energy Systems
by
Ojo, Evans Eshiemogie
,
Addo, Kwabena
,
Kabeya, Musasa
in
Accuracy
,
adversarial robustness
,
Algorithms
2025
The increasing digitization and decentralization of modern energy systems have heightened their vulnerability to sophisticated cyber threats, necessitating advanced, scalable, and privacy-preserving detection frameworks. This paper introduces a novel Federated Quantum Machine Learning (FQML) framework tailored for anomaly detection in multi-agent energy environments. By integrating parameterized quantum circuits (PQCs) at the local agent level with secure federated learning protocols, the framework enhances detection accuracy while preserving data privacy. A trimmed-mean aggregation scheme and differential privacy mechanisms are embedded to defend against Byzantine behaviors and data-poisoning attacks. The problem is formally modeled as a constrained optimization task, accounting for quantum circuit depth, communication latency, and adversarial resilience. Experimental validation on synthetic smart grid datasets demonstrates that FQML achieves high detection accuracy (≥96.3%), maintains robustness under adversarial perturbations, and reduces communication overhead by 28.6% compared to classical federated baselines. These results substantiate the viability of quantum-enhanced federated learning as a practical, hardware-conscious approach to distributed cybersecurity in next-generation energy infrastructures.
Journal Article