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SimQFL: A Quantum Federated Learning Simulator with Real-Time Visualization

Rahman, Ratun, Pokharel, Atit, Uddin, Md Raihan, Nguyen, Dinh C.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Quantum federated learning (QFL) is an emerging field that has the potential to revolutionize computation by taking advantage of quantum physics concepts in a distributed machine learning (ML) environment. However, the majority of available quantum simulators are primarily built for general quantum circuit simulation and do not include integrated support for machine learning tasks such as training, evaluation, and iterative optimization. Furthermore, designing and assessing quantum learning algorithms is still a difficult and resource-intensive task. Real-time updates are essential for observing model convergence, debugging quantum circuits, and making conscious choices during training with the use of limited resources. Furthermore, most current simulators fail to support the integration of user-specific data for training purposes, undermining the main purpose of using a simulator. In this study, we introduce SimQFL, a customized simulator that simplifies and accelerates QFL experiments in quantum network applications. SimQFL supports real-time, epoch-wise output development and visualization, allowing researchers to monitor the process of learning across each training round. Furthermore, SimQFL offers an intuitive and visually appealing interface that facilitates ease of use and seamless execution. Users can customize key variables such as the number of epochs, learning rates, number of clients, and quantum hyperparameters such as qubits and quantum layers, making the simulator suitable for various QFL applications. The system gives immediate feedback following each epoch by showing intermediate outcomes and dynamically illustrating learning curves. SimQFL is a practical and interactive platform enabling academics and developers to prototype, analyze, and tune quantum neural networks with greater transparency and control in distributed quantum networks.


TunnElQNN: A Hybrid Quantum-classical Neural Network for Efficient Learning

Abbas, A. H.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Hybrid quantum-classical neural networks (HQCNNs) represent a promising frontier in machine learning, leveraging the complementary strengths of both models. In this work, we propose the development of TunnElQNN, a non-sequential architecture composed of alternating classical and quantum layers. Within the classical component, we employ the Tunnelling Diode Activation Function (TDAF), inspired by the I-V characteristics of quantum tunnelling. We evaluate the performance of this hybrid model on a synthetic dataset of interleaving half-circle for multi-class classification tasks with varying degrees of class overlap. The model is compared against a baseline hybrid architecture that uses the conventional ReLU activation function (ReLUQNN). Our results show that the TunnElQNN model consistently outperforms the ReLUQNN counterpart. Furthermore, we analyse the decision boundaries generated by TunnElQNN under different levels of class overlap and compare them to those produced by a neural network implementing TDAF within a fully classical architecture. These findings highlight the potential of integrating physics-inspired activation functions with quantum components to enhance the expressiveness and robustness of hybrid quantum-classical machine learning architectures.


On the status of current quantum machine learning software

Gupta, Manish K., Rybotycki, Tomasz, Gawron, Piotr

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The recent advancements in noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) devices implementation allow us to study their application to real-life computational problems. However, hardware challenges are not the only ones that hinder our quantum computation capabilities. Software limitations are the other, less explored side of this medal. Using satellite image segmentation as a task example, we investigated how difficult it is to run a hybrid quantum-classical model on a real, publicly available quantum device. We also analyzed the costs of such endeavor and the change in quality of model.


Efficient and Accurate Estimation of Lipschitz Constants for Hybrid Quantum-Classical Decision Models

Hashemian, Sajjad, Arvenaghi, Mohammad Saeed

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In this paper, we propose a novel framework for efficiently and accurately estimating Lipschitz constants in hybrid quantum-classical decision models. Our approach integrates classical neural network with quantum variational circuits to address critical issues in learning theory such as fairness verification, robust training, and generalization. By a unified convex optimization formulation, we extend existing classical methods to capture the interplay between classical and quantum layers. This integrated strategy not only provide a tight bound on the Lipschitz constant but also improves computational efficiency with respect to the previous methods.


Seismic inversion using hybrid quantum neural networks

Vashisth, Divakar, Sharma, Rohan, Mukerji, Tapan, Sen, Mrinal K.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Quantum computing leverages qubits, exploiting superposition and entanglement to solve problems intractable for classical computers, offering significant computational advantages. Quantum machine learning (QML), which integrates quantum computing with machine learning, holds immense potential across various fields but remains largely unexplored in geosciences. However, its progress is hindered by the limitations of current NISQ hardware. To address these challenges, hybrid quantum neural networks (HQNNs) have emerged, combining quantum layers within classical neural networks to leverage the strengths of both paradigms. To the best of our knowledge, this study presents the first application of QML to subsurface imaging through the development of hybrid quantum physics-informed neural networks (HQ-PINNs) for seismic inversion. We apply the HQ-PINN framework to invert pre-stack and post-stack seismic datasets, estimating P- and S-impedances. The proposed HQ-PINN architecture follows an encoder-decoder structure, where the encoder (HQNN), processes seismic data to estimate elastic parameters, while the decoder utilizes these parameters to generate the corresponding seismic data based on geophysical relationships. The HQ-PINN model is trained by minimizing the misfit between the input and predicted seismic data generated by the decoder. We systematically evaluate various quantum layer configurations, differentiation methods, and quantum device simulators on the inversion performance, and demonstrate real-world applicability through the individual and simultaneous inversion cases of the Sleipner dataset. The HQ-PINN framework consistently and efficiently estimated accurate subsurface impedances across the synthetic and field case studies, establishing the feasibility of leveraging QML for seismic inversion, thereby paving the way for broader applications of quantum computing in geosciences.


QuFeX: Quantum feature extraction module for hybrid quantum-classical deep neural networks

Jain, Naman, Kalev, Amir

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

We introduce Quantum Feature Extraction (QuFeX), a novel quantum machine learning module. The proposed module enables feature extraction in a reduced-dimensional space, significantly decreasing the number of parallel evaluations required in typical quantum convolutional neural network architectures. Its design allows seamless integration into deep classical neural networks, making it particularly suitable for hybrid quantum-classical models. As an application of QuFeX, we propose Qu-Net -- a hybrid architecture which integrates QuFeX at the bottleneck of a U-Net architecture. The latter is widely used for image segmentation tasks such as medical imaging and autonomous driving. Our numerical analysis indicates that the Qu-Net can achieve superior segmentation performance compared to a U-Net baseline. These results highlight the potential of QuFeX to enhance deep neural networks by leveraging hybrid computational paradigms, providing a path towards a robust framework for real-world applications requiring precise feature extraction.


Data re-uploading in Quantum Machine Learning for time series: application to traffic forecasting

Schetakis, Nikolaos, Bonfini, Paolo, Alisoltani, Negin, Blazakis, Konstantinos, Tsintzos, Symeon I., Askitopoulos, Alexis, Aghamalyan, Davit, Fafoutellis, Panagiotis, Vlahogianni, Eleni I.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Accurate traffic forecasting plays a crucial role in modern Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS), as it enables real-time traffic flow management, reduces congestion, and improves the overall efficiency of urban transportation networks. With the rise of Quantum Machine Learning (QML), it has emerged a new paradigm possessing the potential to enhance predictive capabilities beyond what classical machine learning models can achieve. In the present work we pursue a heuristic approach to explore the potential of QML, and focus on a specific transport issue. In particular, as a case study we investigate a traffic forecast task for a major urban area in Athens (Greece), for which we possess high-resolution data. In this endeavor we explore the application of Quantum Neural Networks (QNN), and, notably, we present the first application of quantum data re-uploading in the context of transport forecasting. This technique allows quantum models to better capture complex patterns, such as traffic dynamics, by repeatedly encoding classical data into a quantum state. Aside from providing a prediction model, we spend considerable effort in comparing the performance of our hybrid quantum-classical neural networks with classical deep learning approaches. Our results show that hybrid models achieve competitive accuracy with state-of-the-art classical methods, especially when the number of qubits and re-uploading blocks is increased. While the classical models demonstrate lower computational demands, we provide evidence that increasing the complexity of the quantum model improves predictive accuracy. These findings indicate that QML techniques, and specifically the data re-uploading approach, hold promise for advancing traffic forecasting models and could be instrumental in addressing challenges inherent in ITS environments.


Hybrid-Quantum Neural Architecture Search for The Proximal Policy Optimization Algorithm

Zada, Moustafa

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Quantum machine learning (QML) has emerged in recent years as a promising approach to advance classical machine learning, considering that they can evaluate classically intractable functions [1] since they have properties that the classical computational models don't have access to like the exponential Hilbert space, entanglement, and the parallelistic nature of quantum computation in the presence of superposition. But, Since we are still in the NISQ era, with limited quantum computers, many studies have discussed the use of hybrid architectures in the hope that they can get an advantage from the currently existing quantum computers or if they could find a way to distribute the work harmonically and efficiently between the classical and the quantum part, each part with what they are good at. An important Distinguish that had to be made here is that when we are not considering variational quantum circuits as hybrid classical-quantum models, since they use the classical computer only to train and optimize the quantum circuit but they don't interfere with the actual learning and the inference of the model, instead, we treat the VQC itself as a layer, a quantum layer, in the neural network of the hybrid model along with classical layers with artificial neurons. In this paper, we apply the proximal policy optimization (PPO) algorithm to the classical CartPole environment problem to ascertain whether the quantum-enhanced PPO algorithm gives any advantage over the classical version. In particular, we use a genetic algorithm-esque version of quantum PPO to train the system. This paper is divided as follows: In Sec.2, we examine analogous studies to the experiments we have performed in order to gauge what has been done, and how we can improve upon it. In Sec.3, we provide a brief synopsis of the operation of the PPO algorithm.


QuLTSF: Long-Term Time Series Forecasting with Quantum Machine Learning

Chittoor, Hari Hara Suthan, Griffin, Paul Robert, Neufeld, Ariel, Thompson, Jayne, Gu, Mile

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Long-term time series forecasting (LTSF) involves predicting a large number of future values of a time series based on the past values and is an essential task in a wide range of domains including weather forecasting, stock market analysis, disease outbreak prediction. Over the decades LTSF algorithms have transitioned from statistical models to deep learning models like transformer models. Despite the complex architecture of transformer based LTSF models `Are Transformers Effective for Time Series Forecasting? (Zeng et al., 2023)' showed that simple linear models can outperform the state-of-the-art transformer based LTSF models. Recently, quantum machine learning (QML) is evolving as a domain to enhance the capabilities of classical machine learning models. In this paper we initiate the application of QML to LTSF problems by proposing QuLTSF, a simple hybrid QML model for multivariate LTSF. Through extensive experiments on a widely used weather dataset we show the advantages of QuLTSF over the state-of-the-art classical linear models, in terms of reduced mean squared error and mean absolute error.


Dynamic Spectrum Access for Ambient Backscatter Communication-assisted D2D Systems with Quantum Reinforcement Learning

Van Huynh, Nguyen, Zhang, Bolun, Tran, Dinh-Hieu, Hoang, Dinh Thai, Nguyen, Diep N., Zheng, Gan, Niyato, Dusit, Pham, Quoc-Viet

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Spectrum access is an essential problem in device-to-device (D2D) communications. However, with the recent growth in the number of mobile devices, the wireless spectrum is becoming scarce, resulting in low spectral efficiency for D2D communications. To address this problem, this paper aims to integrate the ambient backscatter communication technology into D2D devices to allow them to backscatter ambient RF signals to transmit their data when the shared spectrum is occupied by mobile users. To obtain the optimal spectrum access policy, i.e., stay idle or access the shared spectrum and perform active transmissions or backscattering ambient RF signals for transmissions, to maximize the average throughput for D2D users, deep reinforcement learning (DRL) can be adopted. However, DRL-based solutions may require long training time due to the curse of dimensionality issue as well as complex deep neural network architectures. For that, we develop a novel quantum reinforcement learning (RL) algorithm that can achieve a faster convergence rate with fewer training parameters compared to DRL thanks to the quantum superposition and quantum entanglement principles. Specifically, instead of using conventional deep neural networks, the proposed quantum RL algorithm uses a parametrized quantum circuit to approximate an optimal policy. Extensive simulations then demonstrate that the proposed solution not only can significantly improve the average throughput of D2D devices when the shared spectrum is busy but also can achieve much better performance in terms of convergence rate and learning complexity compared to existing DRL-based methods.