QUANT-PHLGOct 12, 2024

Exploring Channel Distinguishability in Local Neighborhoods of the Model Space in Quantum Neural Networks

arXiv:2410.09470v21 citationsh-index: 13ICLR
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses training challenges in quantum machine learning for researchers, but it is incremental as it builds on existing ansatz analysis.

The paper tackles the difficulty of training Quantum Neural Networks (QNNs) by analyzing ansatz architectures, showing that QNNs with few parameters are hardly discriminable upon small parameter updates, which suggests iterative training may be ineffective.

With the increasing interest in Quantum Machine Learning, Quantum Neural Networks (QNNs) have emerged and gained significant attention. These models have, however, been shown to be notoriously difficult to train, which we hypothesize is partially due to the architectures, called ansatzes, that are hardly studied at this point. Therefore, in this paper, we take a step back and analyze ansatzes. We initially consider their expressivity, i.e., the space of operations they are able to express, and show that the closeness to being a 2-design, the primarily used measure, fails at capturing this property. Hence, we look for alternative ways to characterize ansatzes by considering the local neighborhood of the model space, in particular, analyzing model distinguishability upon small perturbation of parameters. We derive an upper bound on their distinguishability, showcasing that QNNs with few parameters are hardly discriminable upon update. Our numerical experiments support our bounds and further indicate that there is a significant degree of variability, which stresses the need for warm-starting or clever initialization. Altogether, our work provides an ansatz-centric perspective on training dynamics and difficulties in QNNs, ultimately suggesting that iterative training of small quantum models may not be effective, which contrasts their initial motivation.

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