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Benchmarking for quantum machine learning models

This repository contains tools to compare the performance of near-term quantum machine learning (QML) as well as standard classical machine learning models on supervised learning tasks.

It is based on pipelines using Pennylane for the simulation of quantum circuits, JAX for training, and scikit-learn for the benchmarking workflows.

Version 0.1 of the code can be used to reproduce the results in the study "Better than classical? The subtle art of benchmarking quantum machine learning models".

Overview

A short summary of the various folders in this repository is as follows:

  • paper: contains code and results to reproduce the results in the paper
    • benchmarks: scripts that generate datasets of varied difficulty and feature dimensions
    • plots: scripts that generate the plots and additional experiments in the paper
    • results: data files recording the results of the benchmark experiments that the study is based on
  • scripts: example code for how to benchmark a model on a dataset
  • src/qml_benchmarks: a simple Python package defining quantum and classical models, as well as data generating functions

Installation

You can install the qml_benchmarks package in your environment with

pip install -e .

from the root directory of the repository. This will install the package in editable mode, meaning that changes to the code will be reflected in the installed package.

Dependencies of this package can be installed in your environment by running

pip install -r requirements.txt

Adding a custom model

We use the Scikit-learn API to create models and perform hyperparameter search.

A minimal template for a new quantum model is as follows, and can be stored in qml_benchmarks/models/my_model.py:

import numpy as np

from sklearn.base import BaseEstimator, ClassifierMixin


class MyModel(BaseEstimator, ClassifierMixin):
    def __init__(self, hyperparam1="some_value",  random_state=42):

        # store hyperparameters as attributes
        self.hyperparam1 = hyperparam1
                    
        # reproducibility is ensured by creating a numpy PRNG and using it for all
        # subsequent random functions. 
        self._random_state = random_state
        self._rng = np.random.default_rng(random_state)
            
        # define data-dependent attributes
        self.params_ = None
        self.n_qubits_ = None

    def fit(self, X, y):
        """Fit the model to data X and labels y.

        Add your custom training loop here and store the trained model parameters in `self.params_`.
        Set the data-dependent attributes, such as `self.n_qubits_`.
        
        Args:
            X (array_like): Data of shape (n_samples, n_features)
            y (array_like): Labels of shape (n_samples,)
        """
        # ... your code here ...        
        

    def predict(self, X):
        """Predict labels for data X.
        
        Args:
            X (array_like): Data of shape (n_samples, n_features)
        
        Returns:
            array_like: Predicted labels of shape (n_samples,)
        """
        # ... your code here ...
        
        return y_pred

    def predict_proba(self, X):
        """Predict label probabilities for data X.

        Args:
            X (array_like): Data of shape (n_samples, n_features)

        Returns:
            array_like: Predicted label probabilities of shape
            (n_samples, n_classes)
        """
        # ... your code here ...
        return y_pred_proba

To ensure compatibility with scikit-learn functionalities, all models should inherit the BaseEstimator and ClassifierMixin classes. Implementing the fit, predict, and predict_proba methods is sufficient.

The model parameters are stored as a dictionary in self.params_.

There are two types of other attributes: those initialized when the instance of the class is created, and those that are only known when data is seen (for example, the number of qubits may depend on the dimension of input vectors). In the latter case, a default (i.e., self.n_qubits_ = None) is set in the init function, and the value is typically updated when fit is called for the first time.

It can be useful to implement an initialize method which initializes an untrained model with random parameters so that predict_proba and predict can be called.

The custom model can be used as follows:

import numpy as np
from sklearn.datasets import make_classification
from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split
from qml_benchmarks.models.my_model import MyModel

# load data and use labels -1, 1
X, y = make_classification(n_samples=100, n_features=2,
                           n_informative=2, n_redundant=0, random_state=42)
y = np.array([-1 if y_ == 0 else 1 for y_ in y])

# split data
X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(X, y, test_size=0.2)

# fit model
model = MyModel(hyperparam1=0.5)
model.fit(X_train, y_train)

# score the model
print(model.score(X_test, y_test))

Datasets

The qml_benchmarks.data module provides generating functions to create datasets for binary classification. A generating function can be used like this:

from qml_benchmarks.data import generate_two_curves

X, y = generate_two_curves(n_samples=200, n_features=4, degree=3, noise=0.1, offset=0.01)

Note that some datasets might have different return data structures, for example if the train/test split is performed by the generating function.

The original datasets used in the paper can be generated by running the scripts in the paper/benchmarks folder, such as:

python paper/benchmarks/generate_hyperplanes.py

This will create a new folder in paper/benchmarks containing the datasets.

Running hyperparameter optimization

In the folder scripts we provide an example that can be used to generate results for a hyperparameter search for any model and dataset. The script can be run as

python run_hyperparameter_search.py --classifier-name "DataReuploadingClassifier" --dataset-path "my_dataset.csv"

where my_dataset.csv is a CSV file containing the training data such that each column is a feature and the last column is the target.

Unless otherwise specified, the hyperparameter grid is loaded from qml_benchmarks/hyperparameter_settings.py. One can override the default grid of hyperparameters by specifying the hyperparameter list, where the datatype is inferred from the default values. For example, for the DataReuploadingClassifier we can run:

python run_hyperparameter_search.py \
    --classifier-name DataReuploadingClassifier \
    --dataset-path "my_dataset.csv" \
    --n_layers 1 2 \
    --observable_type "single" "full"\
    --learning_rate 0.001 \
    --clean True

which runs a search for the grid:

{'max_vmap': array([1]), 
'batch_size': array([32]), 
'learning_rate': [0.001]), 
'n_layers': [1, 2], 
'observable_type': ['single']}

The script creates two CSV files that contains the detailed results of hyperparameter search and the best hyperparameters obtained in the search. These files are similar to the ones stored in the paper/results folder.

The best hyperparameters can be loaded into a model and used to score the classifier.

You can check the various options for the script using:

python run_hyperparameter_search --help

Feedback

Please help us improve this repository and report problems by opening an issue or pull request.

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