QUANT-PHCVDec 16, 2022

Quantum Kernel for Image Classification of Real World Manufacturing Defects

arXiv:2212.08693v18 citationsh-index: 2
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of using quantum computing for real-world image classification in manufacturing, but it is incremental as it tests existing methods with mixed results.

The study applied a quantum kernel method to classify manufacturing defect images, finding that angle encoding on a quantum processor sometimes outperformed classical SVM but results were inconsistent, while error mitigation did not improve outcomes.

The quantum kernel method results clearly outperformed a classical SVM when analyzing low-resolution images with minimal feature selection on the quantum simulator, with inconsistent results when run on an actual quantum processor. We chose to use an existing quantum kernel method for classification. We applied dynamic decoupling error mitigation using the Mitiq package to the Quantum SVM kernel method, which, to our knowledge, has never been done for quantum kernel methods for image classification. We applied the quantum kernel method to classify real world image data from a manufacturing facility using a superconducting quantum computer. The manufacturing images were used to determine if a product was defective or was produced correctly through the manufacturing process. We also tested the Mitiq dynamical decoupling (DD) methodology to understand effectiveness in decreasing noise-related errors. We also found that the way classical data was encoded onto qubits in quantum states affected our results. All three quantum processing unit (QPU) runs of our angle encoded circuit returned different results, with one run having better than classical results, one run having equivalent to classical results, and a run with worse than classical results. The more complex instantaneous quantum polynomial (IQP) encoding approach showed better precision than classical SVM results when run on a QPU but had a worse recall and F1-score. We found that DD error mitigation did not improve the results of IQP encoded circuits runs and did not have an impact on angle encoded circuits runs on the QPU. In summary, we found that the angle encoded circuit performed the best of the quantum kernel encoding methods on real quantum hardware. In future research projects using quantum kernels to classify images, we recommend exploring other error mitigation techniques than Mitiq DD.

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