Quantum Cross Entropy and Maximum Likelihood Principle

23 Feb 2021  ·  Zhou Shangnan, Yixu Wang ·

Quantum machine learning is an emerging field at the intersection of machine learning and quantum computing. Classical cross entropy plays a central role in machine learning. We define its quantum generalization, the quantum cross entropy, prove its lower bounds, and investigate its relation to quantum fidelity. In the classical case, minimizing cross entropy is equivalent to maximizing likelihood. In the quantum case, when the quantum cross entropy is constructed from quantum data undisturbed by quantum measurements, this relation holds. Classical cross entropy is equal to negative log-likelihood. When we obtain quantum cross entropy through empirical density matrix based on measurement outcomes, the quantum cross entropy is lower-bounded by negative log-likelihood. These two different scenarios illustrate the information loss when making quantum measurements. We conclude that to achieve the goal of full quantum machine learning, it is crucial to utilize the deferred measurement principle.

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