Tingxiang Ji

2papers

2 Papers

66.2QUANT-PHJun 1
Towards Efficient Synthesis of Quantum Graph States by Fusing Graph Motifs

Tingxiang Ji, Hansika Weerasena, Demitry Farfurnik et al.

Photonic graph states with advanced topologies can enable measurement-based quantum computing, distributed quantum sensing, and quantum interconnects. However, the efficient generation of photonic graph states is limited by the probabilistic nature of photonic entangling operations and the exponential dependence of generation rate on resource cost. In this work, we study photonic graph state synthesis as a cost-aware decomposition problem, exploiting local Clifford (LC) equivalence to identify more synthesis-friendly representations of the target graph state before decomposition. Specifically, we propose Cost-aware Fusion-based Decomposition (CFD), a three-stage heuristic framework that decomposes a target graph state into ring, star, and linear motifs, and assembles them via Type-I fusion operations to minimize fusion overhead and physical-qubit consumption. We further show that selecting the LC-equivalent graph state with the minimum number of edges provides a highly effective proxy for near-optimal synthesis: in many cases it matches the best generation rate observed within the LC equivalence class under CFD, and in most remaining cases it remains close to it. Numerical evaluations on graph state orbit data and 2D and 3D lattice graph states demonstrate that CFD achieves up to 84.6\% reduction in resource overhead compared to baseline constructions, and yields improvements in photonic generation rate spanning multiple orders of magnitude. These results suggest that combining structure-aware motif decomposition with LC equivalence is a practical and scalable strategy for photonic graph state synthesis.

LGDec 20, 2024
Post-hoc Interpretability Illumination for Scientific Interaction Discovery

Ling Zhang, Zhichao Hou, Tingxiang Ji et al.

Model interpretability and explainability have garnered substantial attention in recent years, particularly in decision-making applications. However, existing interpretability tools often fall short in delivering satisfactory performance due to limited capabilities or efficiency issues. To address these challenges, we propose a novel post-hoc method: Iterative Kings' Forests (iKF), designed to uncover complex multi-order interactions among variables. iKF iteratively selects the next most important variable, the "King", and constructs King's Forests by placing it at the root node of each tree to identify variables that interact with the "King". It then generates ranked short lists of important variables and interactions of varying orders. Additionally, iKF provides inference metrics to analyze the patterns of the selected interactions and classify them into one of three interaction types: Accompanied Interaction, Synergistic Interaction, and Hierarchical Interaction. Extensive experiments demonstrate the strong interpretive power of our proposed iKF, highlighting its great potential for explainable modeling and scientific discovery across diverse scientific fields.