Hideaki Kawaguchi

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2papers

2 Papers

QUANT-PHMar 27, 2025
Quantitative Evaluation of Quantum/Classical Neural Network Using a Game Solver Metric

Suzukaze Kamei, Hideaki Kawaguchi, Shin Nishio et al.

To evaluate the performance of quantum computing systems relative to classical counterparts and explore the potential, we propose a game-solving benchmark based on Elo ratings in the game of tic-tac-toe. We compare classical convolutional neural networks (CCNNs), quantum or quantum convolutional neural networks (QNNs, QCNNs), and hybrid classical-quantum neural networks (Hybrid NNs) by assessing their performance based on round-robin matches. Our results show that the Hybrid NNs engines achieve Elo ratings comparable to those of CCNNs engines, while the quantum engines underperform under current hardware constraints. Additionally, we implement a QNN integrated with quantum communication and evaluate its performance to quantify the overhead introduced by noisy quantum channels, and the communication overhead was found to be modest. These results demonstrate the viability of using game-based benchmarks for evaluating quantum computing systems and suggest that quantum communication can be incorporated with limited impact on performance, providing a foundation for future hybrid quantum applications.

QUANT-PHOct 9, 2021
Application of quantum computing to a linear non-Gaussian acyclic model for novel medical knowledge discovery

Hideaki Kawaguchi

Recently, with the digitalization of medicine, the utilization of real-world medical data collected from clinical sites has been attracting attention. In this study, quantum computing was applied to a linear non-Gaussian acyclic model to discover causal relationships from real-world medical data alone. Specifically, the independence measure of DirectLiNGAM, a causal discovery algorithm, was calculated using the quantum kernel and its accuracy on real-world medical data was verified. When DirectLiNGAM with the quantum kernel (qLiNGAM) was applied to real-world medical data, a case was confirmed in which the causal structure could be correctly estimated when the amount of data was small, which was not possible with existing methods. Furthermore, qLiNGAM was implemented on real quantum hardware in an experiment using IBMQ. It is suggested that qLiNGAM may be able to discover new medical knowledge and contribute to the solution of medical problems, even when only a small amount of data is available.