QUANT-PHLGMay 8, 2021

Quantum Machine Learning For Classical Data

arXiv:2105.03684v212 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

It addresses the potential for quantum acceleration in machine learning, offering insights into promises and limitations for researchers in quantum computing and AI, though it is largely theoretical and incremental in nature.

This dissertation investigates quantum algorithms for supervised machine learning on classical data, deriving novel computational complexity bounds for optimal learning rates and proposing a new algorithm for Quantum Boltzmann machines, while highlighting potential exponential advantages for quantum data applications.

In this dissertation, we study the intersection of quantum computing and supervised machine learning algorithms, which means that we investigate quantum algorithms for supervised machine learning that operate on classical data. This area of research falls under the umbrella of quantum machine learning, a research area of computer science which has recently received wide attention. In particular, we investigate to what extent quantum computers can be used to accelerate supervised machine learning algorithms. The aim of this is to develop a clear understanding of the promises and limitations of the current state of the art of quantum algorithms for supervised machine learning, but also to define directions for future research in this exciting field. We start by looking at supervised quantum machine learning (QML) algorithms through the lens of statistical learning theory. In this framework, we derive novel bounds on the computational complexities of a large set of supervised QML algorithms under the requirement of optimal learning rates. Next, we give a new bound for Hamiltonian simulation of dense Hamiltonians, a major subroutine of most known supervised QML algorithms, and then derive a classical algorithm with nearly the same complexity. We then draw the parallels to recent "quantum-inspired" results, and will explain the implications of these results for quantum machine learning applications. Looking for areas which might bear larger advantages for QML algorithms, we finally propose a novel algorithm for Quantum Boltzmann machines, and argue that quantum algorithms for quantum data are one of the most promising applications for QML with potentially exponential advantage over classical approaches.

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