Abstract
Toxicity is a roadblock that prevents an inordinate number of drugs from being used in potentially life-saving applications. Deep learning provides a promising solution to finding ideal drug candidates; however, the vastness of chemical space coupled with the underlying Formula Presented matrix multiplication means these efforts quickly become computationally demanding. To remedy this, we present a hybrid quantum-classical neural network for predicting drug toxicity utilizing a quantum circuit design that mimics classical neural behavior by explicitly calculating matrix products with complexity Formula Presented. Leveraging the Hadamard test for efficient inner product estimation rather than the conventionally used swap test, we reduce the number of qubits by half and remove the need for quantum phase estimation. Directly computing matrix products quantum mechanically allows for learnable weights to be transferred from a quantum to a classical device for further training. We apply our framework to the Tox21 data set and show that it achieves commensurate predictive accuracy to the model’s fully classical Formula Presented analogue. Additionally, we demonstrate that the model continues to learn, without disruption, once transferred to a fully classical architecture. We believe that combining the quantum advantage of reduced complexity and the classical advantage of noise-free calculation will pave the way for more scalable machine learning models.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Smaldone, A. M., & Batista, V. S. (2024). Quantum-to-Classical Neural Network Transfer Learning Applied to Drug Toxicity Prediction. Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation, 20(11), 4901–4908. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.4c00432
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