<p>Quantum neural networks (QNNs), typically implemented via parameterized quantum circuits (PQCs), offer a potential route to quantum advantage in learning. We review recent progress through the Fourier structure of PQCs: the encoding Hamiltonian fixes the accessible frequency set, while training estimates the corresponding Fourier coefficients. This perspective explains how QNNs can mitigate the spectral bias that limits classical deep neural networks and motivates task-specialized designs. In particular, quantum ordinary differential equation (QODE) solver, quantum convolutional neural networks (QCNNs) and quantum reinforcement learning (QRL) exploit frequency pinching to better capture high-frequency image features and structured value landscapes. We further discuss trainability on noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) hardware, emphasizing Lie-algebraic and Fourier views of barren plateaus and practical mitigation strategies. Together, the Fourier and Lie perspectives yield concrete design principles and motivate quantum-native architectures built around spectral bias avoidance rather than classical imitation.</p>

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Fourier Analysis Perspective on Quantum Neural Networks

  • Seungcheol Oh,
  • Emily Jimin Roh,
  • Athanasios V. Vasilakos,
  • Soohyun Park,
  • Joongheon Kim

摘要

Quantum neural networks (QNNs), typically implemented via parameterized quantum circuits (PQCs), offer a potential route to quantum advantage in learning. We review recent progress through the Fourier structure of PQCs: the encoding Hamiltonian fixes the accessible frequency set, while training estimates the corresponding Fourier coefficients. This perspective explains how QNNs can mitigate the spectral bias that limits classical deep neural networks and motivates task-specialized designs. In particular, quantum ordinary differential equation (QODE) solver, quantum convolutional neural networks (QCNNs) and quantum reinforcement learning (QRL) exploit frequency pinching to better capture high-frequency image features and structured value landscapes. We further discuss trainability on noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) hardware, emphasizing Lie-algebraic and Fourier views of barren plateaus and practical mitigation strategies. Together, the Fourier and Lie perspectives yield concrete design principles and motivate quantum-native architectures built around spectral bias avoidance rather than classical imitation.