LGCVETOct 26, 2025

Quantum Machine Learning for Image Classification: A Hybrid Model of Residual Network with Quantum Support Vector Machine

arXiv:2510.23659v14 citationsh-index: 32025 2nd International Conference on Next-Generation Computing, IoT and Machine Learning (NCIM)
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This provides a potential solution for agricultural disease detection through hybrid quantum-classical modeling, though it appears incremental as it combines existing quantum and classical components.

This study tackled potato disease detection from images by combining ResNet-50 for feature extraction with Quantum Support Vector Machines (QSVM) for classification, achieving 99.23% accuracy which outperformed classical models like SVM and Random Forest.

Recently, there has been growing attention on combining quantum machine learning (QML) with classical deep learning approaches, as computational techniques are key to improving the performance of image classification tasks. This study presents a hybrid approach that uses ResNet-50 (Residual Network) for feature extraction and Quantum Support Vector Machines (QSVM) for classification in the context of potato disease detection. Classical machine learning as well as deep learning models often struggle with high-dimensional and complex datasets, necessitating advanced techniques like quantum computing to improve classification efficiency. In our research, we use ResNet-50 to extract deep feature representations from RGB images of potato diseases. These features are then subjected to dimensionality reduction using Principal Component Analysis (PCA). The resulting features are processed through QSVM models which apply various quantum feature maps such as ZZ, Z, and Pauli-X to transform classical data into quantum states. To assess the model performance, we compared it with classical machine learning algorithms such as Support Vector Machine (SVM) and Random Forest (RF) using five-fold stratified cross-validation for comprehensive evaluation. The experimental results demonstrate that the Z-feature map-based QSVM outperforms classical models, achieving an accuracy of 99.23 percent, surpassing both SVM and RF models. This research highlights the advantages of integrating quantum computing into image classification and provides a potential disease detection solution through hybrid quantum-classical modeling.

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