Parameter-Efficient Continuous-Variable Photonic Quantum Neural Networks for Edge Quantum AI: Demonstration in Oral Cancer Detection
2026-06-26 • Machine Learning
Machine Learning
AI summaryⓘ
The authors explore using a special kind of quantum computing that works with light (photonic quantum computing) to help smartphones detect oral cancer from images. They created a hybrid system combining traditional image analysis methods and a simplified quantum neural network that runs at room temperature. Their simplified quantum model uses fewer parameters, runs efficiently on small devices, and performed better than some traditional models in tests. This shows promise for using light-based quantum computing to improve medical diagnosis in places with limited resources.
oral cancer detectionphotonic quantum computingcontinuous-variable quantum computingMobileNetV1principal component analysisquantum neural networkbarren plateauscalibrated accuracyedge computingparameter efficiency
Authors
Akshay Bhagwan Sonawane, Sophie Choe, Lakshman Tamil
Abstract
Early detection of oral cancer markedly improves clinical outcomes, yet specialized diagnostic tools remain scarce in low-resource settings. Smartphone-based screening is a scalable alternative but needs lightweight models that run within edge-hardware constraints. Hybrid classical-quantum architectures are emerging candidates for parameter-efficient learning, yet most rely on qubit hardware that needs cryogenic operation, unsuitable for edge deployment. Continuous-variable (CV) photonic quantum computing, which operates at room temperature, offers a complementary route. We investigate a hybrid classical-CV quantum classifier for oral cancer detection from smartphone images. The pipeline combines a MobileNetV1 feature extractor, principal component analysis to 16 dimensions, and a parameterized CV-QNN of displacement, interferometric, and Kerr gates on a photonic backend. We propose a simplified $Φ\circ D \circ U_1$ CV-QNN architecture that cuts trainable parameters 40-45% relative to the standard CV-QNN layer of Killoran et al. (2019a), and identify dimensionality-reduction and encoding-restriction strategies that mitigate barren plateaus, raising loss-gradient variance by roughly 58 orders of magnitude. Whether the simplified layer beats the full layer is width-dependent: the full layer holds a small but significant edge at two qumodes, whereas the simplified layer is significantly better at four qumodes using 44% fewer parameters. The strongest model, a four-qumode simplified CV-QNN with only 18 parameters, attains the highest validation AUC of all models, exceeds a 55-parameter classical baseline using 67% fewer parameters, and reaches 100% calibrated test accuracy across all seeds. These results support CV photonic quantum machine learning for parameter-efficient, room-temperature medical image classification and motivate progress toward edge quantum AI.