Time series quantum classifiers with amplitude embedding
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Pegalajar Cuéllar, Manuel; Cano Gutiérrez, Carlos; Baca Ruiz, Luis Gonzaga; Servadei, LorenzoEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Quantum machine learning Time series classification Amplitude embedding
Date
2023-11-27Referencia bibliográfica
Cuéllar, M.P., Cano, C., Ruiz, L.G.B. et al. Time series quantum classifiers with amplitude embedding. Quantum Mach. Intell. 5, 45 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s42484-023-00133-0
Sponsorship
Project QUANERGY (Ref. TED2021-129360B-I00), Ecological and Digital Transition R&D projects call 2022 by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and European Union NextGeneration EU/PRTR; Grant PID2021-128970OA-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/50110 0011033/FEDERAbstract
Quantum Machine Learningwas born during the past decade as the intersection of Quantum Computing and Machine Learning.
Today, advances in quantum computer hardware and the design of simulation frameworks able to run quantum algorithms in
classic computers make it possible to extend classic artificial intelligence models to a quantum environment. Despite these
achievements, several questions regarding the whole quantum machine learning pipeline remain unanswered, for instance the
problem of classical data representation on quantum hardware, or the methodologies for designing and evaluating quantum
models for common learning tasks such as classification, function approximation, clustering, etc. These problems become
even more difficult to solve in the case of Time Series processing, where the context of past historical data may influence
the behavior of the decision-making model. In this piece of research, we address the problem of Time Series classification
using quantum models, and propose an efficient and compact representation of time series in quantum data using amplitude
embedding. The proposal is capable of representing a time series of length n in log2(n) computational units, and experiments
conducted on benchmark time series classification problems show that quantum models designed for classification can also
outperform the accuracy of classic methods.