Toward Scalable Artificial Intelligence in Finance
Jorge Sanz, Yada Zhu
SCC 2021
Hybrid quantum/classical variational algorithms can be implemented on noisy intermediate-scale quantum computers and can be used to find solutions for combinatorial optimization problems. Approaches discussed in the literature minimize the expectation of the problem Hamiltonian for a parameterized trial quantum state. The expectation is estimated as the sample mean of a set of measurement outcomes, while the parameters of the trial state are optimized classically. This procedure is fully justified for quantum mechanical observables such as molecular energies. In the case of classical optimization problems, which yield diagonal Hamiltonians, we argue that aggregating the samples in a different way than the expected value is more natural. In this paper we propose the Conditional Value-at-Risk as an aggregation function. We empirically show – using classical simulation as well as quantum hardware – that this leads to faster convergence to better solutions for all combinatorial optimization problems tested in our study. We also provide analytical results to explain the observed difference in performance between different variational algorithms.
Jorge Sanz, Yada Zhu
SCC 2021
Mark Weber, Mikhail Yurochkin, et al.
NeurIPS 2020
Panagiotis Kl. Barkoutsos, Fotios Gkritsis, et al.
Chemical Science
Yingdong Lu, Siva Theja Maguluri, et al.
ACC 2017