Post-variational quantum neural networks
read the original abstract
Hybrid quantum-classical computing in the noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) era with variational algorithms can exhibit barren plateau issues, causing difficult convergence of gradient-based optimization techniques. In this paper, we discuss "post-variational strategies", which shift tunable parameters from the quantum computer to the classical computer, opting for ensemble strategies when optimizing quantum models. We discuss various strategies and design principles for constructing individual quantum circuits, where the resulting ensembles can be optimized with convex programming. Further, we discuss architectural designs of post-variational quantum neural networks and analyze the propagation of estimation errors throughout such neural networks. Finally, we show that empirically, post-variational quantum neural networks using our architectural designs can potentially provide better results than variational algorithms and performance comparable to that of two-layer neural networks.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 3 Pith papers
-
Accelerating Inference for Multilayer Neural Networks with Quantum Computers
Quantum circuits for coherent multilayer neural network inference achieve quadratic to polylogarithmic speedups over classical methods depending on quantum data access models for inputs and weights.
-
QKAN: quantum Kolmogorov-Arnold networks with applications in machine learning and multivariate state preparation
QKAN is a quantum algorithmic framework using block-encodings and QSVT to implement wide-and-shallow networks for quantum learning and compositional state preparation.
-
Optimal quantum reservoir learning in proximity to universality
A tunable mixing parameter p in random quantum circuits controls the transition from classically simulable to expressive quantum reservoir dynamics via entanglement and nonstabilizer content.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.