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Quantum Machine Learning
Learning Reduced Representations for Quantum Classifiers
arXiv
Authors: Patrick Odagiu, Vasilis Belis, Lennart Schulze, Panagiotis Barkoutsos, Michele Grossi, Florentin Reiter, Günther Dissertori, Ivano Tavernelli, Sofia Vallecorsa
Year
2025
Paper ID
16396
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
158
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Data sets that are specified by a large number of features are currently outside the area of applicability for quantum machine learning algorithms. An immediate solution to this impasse is the application of dimensionality reduction methods before passing the data to the quantum algorithm. We investigate six conventional feature extraction algorithms and five autoencoder-based dimensionality reduction models to a particle physics data set with 67 features. The reduced representations generated by these models are then used to train a quantum support vector machine for solving a binary classification problem: whether a Higgs boson is produced in proton collisions at the LHC. We show that the autoencoder methods learn a better lower-dimensional representation of the data, with the method we design, the Sinkclass autoencoder, performing 40% better than the baseline. The methods developed here open up the applicability of quantum machine learning to a larger array of data sets. Moreover, we provide a recipe for effective dimensionality reduction in this context.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Machine Learning research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2025 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Data sets that are specified by a large number of features are currently outside the area of applicability for quantum machine learning algorithms.
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