LGETMar 9, 2024

Hybrid Quantum-inspired Resnet and Densenet for Pattern Recognition

arXiv:2403.05754v75 citationsh-index: 30Neurocomputing
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses pattern recognition for applications with noisy datasets, but it is incremental as it builds on existing quantum-inspired and classical neural network methods.

The authors tackled pattern recognition by proposing hybrid quantum-inspired neural networks with adaptive residual and dense connections, achieving 3%-4% higher accuracy than a state-of-the-art hybrid quantum-classical network and 2%-3% higher accuracy than traditional quantum-inspired networks without such connections.

In this paper, we propose two hybrid quantum-inspired neural networks with adaptive residual and dense connections respectively for pattern recognition. We explain the frameworks of the symmetrical circuit models in the quantum-inspired layers in our hybrid models. We also illustrate the potential superiority of our hybrid models to prevent gradient explosion owing to the sine and cosine functions in the quantum-inspired layers. Groups of numerical experiments on generalization power showcase that our hybrid models are comparable to the pure classical models with different noisy datasets utilized. Furthermore, the comparison between our hybrid models and a state-of-the-art hybrid quantum-classical convolutional network demonstrates 3%-4% higher accuracy of our hybrid densely-connected model than the hybrid quantum-classical network. Additionally, compared with other two hybrid quantum-inspired residual networks, our hybrid models showcase a little higher accuracy on image datasets with asymmetrical noises. Simultaneously, in terms of groups of robustness experiments, the outcomes demonstrate that our two hybrid models outperform pure classical models notably in resistance to adversarial parameter attacks with various asymmetrical noises. They also indicate the slight superiority of our densely-connected hybrid model over the hybrid quantum-classical network to both symmetrical and asymmetrical attacks. Meanwhile, the accuracy of our two hybrid models is a little bit higher than that of the two hybrid quantum-inspired residual networks. In addition, an ablation study indicate that the recognition accuracy of our two hybrid models is 2%-3% higher than that of the traditional quantum-inspired neural network without residual or dense connection. Eventually, we discuss the application scenarios of our hybrid models by analyzing their computational complexity.

Foundations

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