Quantum (Jun 2022)

An improved quantum-inspired algorithm for linear regression

  • András Gilyén,
  • Zhao Song,
  • Ewin Tang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.22331/q-2022-06-30-754
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6
p. 754

Abstract

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We give a classical algorithm for linear regression analogous to the quantum matrix inversion algorithm [Harrow, Hassidim, and Lloyd, Physical Review Letters'09] for low-rank matrices [Wossnig, Zhao, and Prakash, Physical Review Letters'18], when the input matrix $A$ is stored in a data structure applicable for QRAM-based state preparation. Namely, suppose we are given an $A \in \mathbb{C}^{m\times n}$ with minimum non-zero singular value $\sigma$ which supports certain efficient $\ell_2$-norm importance sampling queries, along with a $b \in \mathbb{C}^m$. Then, for some $x \in \mathbb{C}^n$ satisfying $\|x – A^+b\| \leq \varepsilon\|A^+b\|$, we can output a measurement of $|x\rangle$ in the computational basis and output an entry of $x$ with classical algorithms that run in $\tilde{\mathcal{O}}\big(\frac{\|A\|_{\mathrm{F}}^6\|A\|^6}{\sigma^{12}\varepsilon^4}\big)$ and $\tilde{\mathcal{O}}\big(\frac{\|A\|_{\mathrm{F}}^6\|A\|^2}{\sigma^8\varepsilon^4}\big)$ time, respectively. This improves on previous "quantum-inspired" algorithms in this line of research by at least a factor of $\frac{\|A\|^{16}}{\sigma^{16}\varepsilon^2}$ [Chia, Gilyén, Li, Lin, Tang, and Wang, STOC'20]. As a consequence, we show that quantum computers can achieve at most a factor-of-12 speedup for linear regression in this QRAM data structure setting and related settings. Our work applies techniques from sketching algorithms and optimization to the quantum-inspired literature. Unlike earlier works, this is a promising avenue that could lead to feasible implementations of classical regression in a quantum-inspired settings, for comparison against future quantum computers.