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Learning In Chaos: Efficient Autoscaling and Self-Healing for Multi-Party Distributed Training

Feng, Wenjiao, Xiao, Rongxing, Li, Zonghang, Yu, Hongfang, Sun, Gang, Luo, Long, Guizani, Mohsen, Ho, Qirong, Liu, Steve

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Node and link churn in multi-party, cross-region clusters over wide-area networks (WANs) often disrupts distributed training. However, checkpoint-based recovery and cloud-centric autoscaling react slowly and assume centralized control, which is misaligned with the self-governed setup where institutions can freely join and leave. This paper proposes Chaos, a multi-party distributed training system with self-healing and autoscaling, enabling robust and elastic training under churn. It speeds up autoscaling via multi-neighbor state replication and model sharding. We formalize the sharding and assignment as a MINLP that captures WAN heterogeneity, and reduce it to a tractable MILP by analyzing its monotonicity on a divisibility chain. By establishing an equivalence, we derive a greedy algorithm that follows optimality rules and yields the optimal solution in polynomial time. Chaos uses a cluster monitor to track resource and topology changes, and handles scaling events through peer negotiation protocols, enabling fully self-governed autoscaling among institutions. Experiments show that Chaos has substantially lower scale-out delay than Pollux, Elan, and Autoscaling, and handles scale-in, connect-link, and disconnect-link events within 20ms. It also delivers the lowest idle time, showing superior resource use and scalability as the cluster grows.


Inter3D: A Benchmark and Strong Baseline for Human-Interactive 3D Object Reconstruction

Chen, Gan, He, Ying, Yu, Mulin, Yu, F. Richard, Xu, Gang, Ma, Fei, Li, Ming, Zhou, Guang

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Recent advancements in implicit 3D reconstruction methods, e.g., neural rendering fields and Gaussian splatting, have primarily focused on novel view synthesis of static or dynamic objects with continuous motion states. However, these approaches struggle to efficiently model a human-interactive object with n movable parts, requiring 2^n separate models to represent all discrete states. To overcome this limitation, we propose Inter3D, a new benchmark and approach for novel state synthesis of human-interactive objects. We introduce a self-collected dataset featuring commonly encountered interactive objects and a new evaluation pipeline, where only individual part states are observed during training, while part combination states remain unseen. We also propose a strong baseline approach that leverages Space Discrepancy Tensors to efficiently modelling all states of an object. To alleviate the impractical constraints on camera trajectories across training states, we propose a Mutual State Regularization mechanism to enhance the spatial density consistency of movable parts. In addition, we explore two occupancy grid sampling strategies to facilitate training efficiency. We conduct extensive experiments on the proposed benchmark, showcasing the challenges of the task and the superiority of our approach.


Few measurement shots challenge generalization in learning to classify entanglement

Banchi, Leonardo, Pereira, Jason, Zamboni, Marco

arXiv.org Machine Learning

The ability to extract general laws from a few known examples depends on the complexity of the problem and on the amount of training data. In the quantum setting, the learner's generalization performance is further challenged by the destructive nature of quantum measurements that, together with the no-cloning theorem, limits the amount of information that can be extracted from each training sample. In this paper we focus on hybrid quantum learning techniques where classical machine-learning methods are paired with quantum algorithms and show that, in some settings, the uncertainty coming from a few measurement shots can be the dominant source of errors. We identify an instance of this possibly general issue by focusing on the classification of maximally entangled vs. separable states, showing that this toy problem becomes challenging for learners unaware of entanglement theory. Finally, we introduce an estimator based on classical shadows that performs better in the big data, few copy regime. Our results show that the naive application of classical machine-learning methods to the quantum setting is problematic, and that a better theoretical foundation of quantum learning is required.

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  Genre: Research Report > New Finding (0.54)

Inference, interference and invariance: How the Quantum Fourier Transform can help to learn from data

Wakeham, David, Schuld, Maria

arXiv.org Machine Learning

How can we take inspiration from a typical quantum algorithm to design heuristics for machine learning? A common blueprint, used from Deutsch-Josza to Shor's algorithm, is to place labeled information in superposition via an oracle, interfere in Fourier space, and measure. In this paper, we want to understand how this interference strategy can be used for inference, i.e. to generalize from finite data samples to a ground truth. Our investigative framework is built around the Hidden Subgroup Problem (HSP), which we transform into a learning task by replacing the oracle with classical training data. The standard quantum algorithm for solving the HSP uses the Quantum Fourier Transform to expose an invariant subspace, i.e., a subset of Hilbert space in which the hidden symmetry is manifest. Based on this insight, we propose an inference principle that "compares" the data to this invariant subspace, and suggest a concrete implementation via overlaps of quantum states. We hope that this leads to well-motivated quantum heuristics that can leverage symmetries for machine learning applications.


MEMO-QCD: Quantum Density Estimation through Memetic Optimisation for Quantum Circuit Design

Ardila-García, Juan E., Vargas-Calderón, Vladimir, González, Fabio A., Useche, Diego H., Vinck-Posada, Herbert

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

This paper presents a strategy for efficient quantum circuit design for density estimation. The strategy is based on a quantum-inspired algorithm for density estimation and a circuit optimisation routine based on memetic algorithms. The model maps a training dataset to a quantum state represented by a density matrix through a quantum feature map. This training state encodes the probability distribution of the dataset in a quantum state, such that the density of a new sample can be estimated by projecting its corresponding quantum state onto the training state. We propose the application of a memetic algorithm to find the architecture and parameters of a variational quantum circuit that implements the quantum feature map, along with a variational learning strategy to prepare the training state. Demonstrations of the proposed strategy show an accurate approximation of the Gaussian kernel density estimation method through shallow quantum circuits illustrating the feasibility of the algorithm for near-term quantum hardware.


Statistical Complexity of Quantum Learning

Banchi, Leonardo, Pereira, Jason Luke, Jose, Sharu Theresa, Simeone, Osvaldo

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Recent years have seen significant activity on the problem of using data for the purpose of learning properties of quantum systems or of processing classical or quantum data via quantum computing. As in classical learning, quantum learning problems involve settings in which the mechanism generating the data is unknown, and the main goal of a learning algorithm is to ensure satisfactory accuracy levels when only given access to data and, possibly, side information such as expert knowledge. This article reviews the complexity of quantum learning using information-theoretic techniques by focusing on data complexity, copy complexity, and model complexity. Copy complexity arises from the destructive nature of quantum measurements, which irreversibly alter the state to be processed, limiting the information that can be extracted about quantum data. For example, in a quantum system, unlike in classical machine learning, it is generally not possible to evaluate the training loss simultaneously on multiple hypotheses using the same quantum data. To make the paper self-contained and approachable by different research communities, we provide extensive background material on classical results from statistical learning theory, as well as on the distinguishability of quantum states. Throughout, we highlight the differences between quantum and classical learning by addressing both supervised and unsupervised learning, and we provide extensive pointers to the literature.


Out-of-distribution generalization for learning quantum dynamics

Caro, Matthias C., Huang, Hsin-Yuan, Ezzell, Nicholas, Gibbs, Joe, Sornborger, Andrew T., Cincio, Lukasz, Coles, Patrick J., Holmes, Zoë

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Generalization bounds are a critical tool to assess the training data requirements of Quantum Machine Learning (QML). Recent work has established guarantees for in-distribution generalization of quantum neural networks (QNNs), where training and testing data are drawn from the same data distribution. However, there are currently no results on out-of-distribution generalization in QML, where we require a trained model to perform well even on data drawn from a different distribution to the training distribution. Here, we prove out-of-distribution generalization for the task of learning an unknown unitary. In particular, we show that one can learn the action of a unitary on entangled states having trained only product states. Since product states can be prepared using only single-qubit gates, this advances the prospects of learning quantum dynamics on near term quantum hardware, and further opens up new methods for both the classical and quantum compilation of quantum circuits.


Generalization with quantum geometry for learning unitaries

Haug, Tobias, Kim, M. S.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Generalization is the ability of quantum machine learning models to make accurate predictions on new data by learning from training data. Here, we introduce the data quantum Fisher information metric (DQFIM) to determine when a model can generalize. For variational learning of unitaries, the DQFIM quantifies the amount of circuit parameters and training data needed to successfully train and generalize. We apply the DQFIM to explain when a constant number of training states and polynomial number of parameters are sufficient for generalization. Further, we can improve generalization by removing symmetries from training data. Finally, we show that out-of-distribution generalization, where training and testing data are drawn from different data distributions, can be better than using the same distribution. Our work opens up new approaches to improve generalization in quantum machine learning.


The power and limitations of learning quantum dynamics incoherently

Jerbi, Sofiene, Gibbs, Joe, Rudolph, Manuel S., Caro, Matthias C., Coles, Patrick J., Huang, Hsin-Yuan, Holmes, Zoë

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Quantum process learning is emerging as an important tool to study quantum systems. While studied extensively in coherent frameworks, where the target and model system can share quantum information, less attention has been paid to whether the dynamics of quantum systems can be learned without the system and target directly interacting. Such incoherent frameworks are practically appealing since they open up methods of transpiling quantum processes between the different physical platforms without the need for technically challenging hybrid entanglement schemes. Here we provide bounds on the sample complexity of learning unitary processes incoherently by analyzing the number of measurements that are required to emulate well-established coherent learning strategies. We prove that if arbitrary measurements are allowed, then any efficiently representable unitary can be efficiently learned within the incoherent framework; however, when restricted to shallow-depth measurements only low-entangling unitaries can be learned. We demonstrate our incoherent learning algorithm for low entangling unitaries by successfully learning a 16-qubit unitary on \texttt{ibmq\_kolkata}, and further demonstrate the scalabilty of our proposed algorithm through extensive numerical experiments.


Dynamical simulation via quantum machine learning with provable generalization

Gibbs, Joe, Holmes, Zoë, Caro, Matthias C., Ezzell, Nicholas, Huang, Hsin-Yuan, Cincio, Lukasz, Sornborger, Andrew T., Coles, Patrick J.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Much attention has been paid to dynamical simulation and quantum machine learning (QML) independently as applications for quantum advantage, while the possibility of using QML to enhance dynamical simulations has not been thoroughly investigated. Here we develop a framework for using QML methods to simulate quantum dynamics on near-term quantum hardware. We use generalization bounds, which bound the error a machine learning model makes on unseen data, to rigorously analyze the training data requirements of an algorithm within this framework. This provides a guarantee that our algorithm is resource-efficient, both in terms of qubit and data requirements. Our numerics exhibit efficient scaling with problem size, and we simulate 20 times longer than Trotterization on IBMQ-Bogota.