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Research PaperResearchia:202605.01017

Reorganizing Quantum Measurement Records Improves Time-Series Prediction

Markus Baumann

Abstract

Near-term quantum computers are accessed through repeated circuit executions, which produce finite measurement records rather than exact deterministic outputs. In quantum reservoir computing, these records are converted to feature vectors for a classical readout. The standard expectation-value approach averages all shots from one labeled time step into a single feature vector. This reduces finite-shot noise, but it also gives the readout only one training example from many circuit executions. We...

Submitted: May 1, 2026Subjects: Quantum Physics; Quantum Computing

Description / Details

Near-term quantum computers are accessed through repeated circuit executions, which produce finite measurement records rather than exact deterministic outputs. In quantum reservoir computing, these records are converted to feature vectors for a classical readout. The standard expectation-value approach averages all shots from one labeled time step into a single feature vector. This reduces finite-shot noise, but it also gives the readout only one training example from many circuit executions. We introduce split-ensemble training: the same shots are split into groups, and each group average is used as a separate, partially denoised feature vector for the same target. The quantum circuit, task, and measurement budget remain unchanged. Across simulated forecasting benchmarks and real hardware experiments, this simple reorganization improves prediction when full averaging leaves the readout with too few training examples, with the strongest gains observed on hardware. Our results establish shot-record organization as a simple, broadly applicable algorithmic lever for improving near-term quantum learning without additional quantum hardware cost.


Source: arXiv:2604.28160v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.28160v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.28160v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.28160v1

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Date:
May 1, 2026
Topic:
Quantum Computing
Area:
Quantum Physics
Comments:
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