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Helstrom Quantum Centroid Classifier

The Helstrom Quantum Centroid (HQC) classifier is a quantum-inspired supervised classification approach for data with binary classes (ie. data with 2 classes only). By quantum-inspired, we mean a classification process which employs and exploits Quantum Theory.

It is inspired by the quantum Helstrom observable which acts on the distinguishability between quantum patterns rather than classical patterns of a dataset.

The HQC classifier is based on research undertaken by Giuseppe Sergioli, Roberto Giuntini and Hector Freytes, in their paper:

Sergioli G, Giuntini R, Freytes H (2019) A new quantum approach to binary classification. PLoS ONE 14(5): e0216224.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216224

This Python package includes the option to vary four hyperparameters which are used to optimize the performance of the HQC classifier:

  • There is an option to rescale the dataset.
  • There are two options to choose how the classical dataset is encoded into quantum densities: inverse of the standard stereographic projection or amplitude encoding method.
  • There is an option to choose the number of copies to take for the quantum densities.
  • There are two options to assign class weights to the quantum Helstrom observable terms: equiprobable or weighted.

The package also includes an option for parallel computing using Joblib and an option to split datasets into subsets or batches for optimal speed performance. Parallelization is performed over the two classes and subset splits or batches.

The HQC classifier has the characteristics of a true probabilistic high performing classifier.

The HQC classifier is a true probabilistic classifier, ie. a classifier which gives the class membership probabilities for each sample, without having to use any scaling methods. This means that the probabilities (from predict_proba) are consistent with the scores (from predict).

It is shown in the paper by Sergioli G, Giuntini R and Freytes H that the HQC classifier, on average, outperforms a variety of commonly used classifiers over 14 real-world and artificial datasets, in particular when the hyperparameter, number of copies, is increased. A summary of the performances of the different classifiers examined are shown in the table below:

Rank Classifier Average Success Rate (%)
1 HelstromQuantumCentroid4 72.80
2 HelstromQuantumCentroid3 65.13
3 GaussianNB 58.00
4 HelstromQuantumCentroid2 57.07
5 HelstromQuantumCentroid1 56.60
5 QuadraticDiscriminantAnalysis 56.60
6 GradientBoostingClassifier 52.73
7 ExtraTreesClassifier 51.93
8 KNeighborsClassifier 51.47
9 NearestCentroid 49.13
10 RandomForestClassifier 45.87
11 QuantumNearestMeanCentroid 43.93
12 AdaBoostClassifier 42.93
13 LinearDiscriminantAnalysis 42.00
14 LogisticRegression 36.40
15 BernoulliNB 17.40

*Average success rate is the average number of datasets where the specified classifier outperforms the other classifiers over 14 real-world and artificial datasets. HelstromQuantumCentroidn is the HQC classifier corresponding to the n number of copies taken for the quantum densities.

Source Code

The Python package's source code for the HQC classifier is available here: https://github.com/leockl/helstrom-quantum-centroid-classifier/blob/master/hqc/hqc.py

Documentation

The documentation, including how to install the Python package, how to use the Python package and how the HQC classifier algorithm works, are available here: https://helstrom-quantum-centroid-classifier.readthedocs.io/en/latest/

License

This Python package is licensed under the BSD 3-Clause License, available here: https://github.com/leockl/helstrom-quantum-centroid-classifier/blob/master/LICENSE

References

Sergioli G, Giuntini R, Freytes H (2019) A new quantum approach to binary classification. PLoS ONE 14(5): e0216224. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216224