QUANT-PHAIPFMay 22, 2025

Is Quantum Optimization Ready? An Effort Towards Neural Network Compression using Adiabatic Quantum Computing

arXiv:2505.16332v22 citationsh-index: 18Future generations computer systems
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of optimizing large-scale deep neural networks for sustainable deployment, though it is incremental as it adapts existing quantum methods to a new application.

The paper tackled the problem of compressing deep neural networks by reformulating model compression as a quadratic unconstrained binary optimization problem and applying adiabatic quantum computing, demonstrating that it outperforms classical algorithms in time efficiency and identifies global optima.

Quantum optimization is the most mature quantum computing technology to date, providing a promising approach towards efficiently solving complex combinatorial problems. Methods such as adiabatic quantum computing (AQC) have been employed in recent years on important optimization problems across various domains. In deep learning, deep neural networks (DNN) have reached immense sizes to support new predictive capabilities. Optimization of large-scale models is critical for sustainable deployment, but becomes increasingly challenging with ever-growing model sizes and complexity. While quantum optimization is suitable for solving complex problems, its application to DNN optimization is not straightforward, requiring thorough reformulation for compatibility with commercially available quantum devices. In this work, we explore the potential of adopting AQC for fine-grained pruning-quantization of convolutional neural networks. We rework established heuristics to formulate model compression as a quadratic unconstrained binary optimization (QUBO) problem, and assess the solution space offered by commercial quantum annealing devices. Through our exploratory efforts of reformulation, we demonstrate that AQC can achieve effective compression of practical DNN models. Experiments demonstrate that adiabatic quantum computing (AQC) not only outperforms classical algorithms like genetic algorithms and reinforcement learning in terms of time efficiency but also excels at identifying global optima.

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