Quantum reservoir computing induced by controllable damping
Emanuele Ricci, Francesco Monzani, Luca Nigro, Enrico Prati

TL;DR
This paper introduces a controllable damping algorithm for quantum reservoir computing that stabilizes non-unital evolution, enhances memory retention, and enables scalable quantum random computing on near-term quantum devices.
Contribution
It proposes a novel, stable method for inducing tunable damping in quantum reservoirs, improving information retention and scalability for quantum machine learning.
Findings
The damping algorithm maintains system away from the maximally mixed state.
Quantum correlations improve memory retention in the reservoir.
The approach enables robust quantum random computing on fault-tolerant hardware.
Abstract
Quantum reservoir computing has emerged as a promising machine learning paradigm for processing temporal data on near-term quantum devices, as it allows for exploiting the large computational capacity of the qubits without suffering from typical issues that occur when training a variational quantum circuit. In particular, quantum gate-based echo state networks have proven effective for learning when the evolution of the reservoir circuit is non-unital. Nonetheless, a method for ensuring a tunable and stable non-unital evolution of the circuit was still lacking. We propose an algorithm for inducing damping by applying a controlled rotation to each qubit in the reservoir. It enables tunable, circuit-level amplitude amplification of the zero state, maintaining the system away from the maximally mixed state and preventing information loss caused by repeated mid-circuit measurements. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural Networks and Reservoir Computing · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies
