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Quantifying Gate Contribution in Quantum Feature Maps for Scalable Circuit Optimization

☆☆☆☆☆Mar 20, 2026arxiv →

Abstract

Quantum machine learning offers promising advantages for classification tasks, but noise, decoherence, and connectivity constraints in current devices continue to limit the efficient execution of feature map-based circuits. Gate Assessment and Threshold Evaluation (GATE) is presented as a circuit optimization methodology that reduces quantum feature maps using a novel gate significance index. This index quantifies the relevance of each gate by combining fidelity, entanglement, and sensitivity. It is formulated for both simulator/emulator environments, where quantum states are accessible, and for real hardware, where these quantities are estimated from measurement results and auxiliary circuits. The approach iteratively scans a threshold range, eliminates low-contribution gates, generates optimized quantum machine learning models, and ranks them based on accuracy, runtime, and a balanced performance criterion before final testing. The methodology is evaluated on real-world classification datasets using two representative quantum machine learning models, PegasosQSVM and Quantum Neural Network, in three execution scenarios: noise-free simulation, noisy emulation derived from an IBM backend, and real IBM quantum hardware. The structural impact of gate removal in feature maps is examined, compatibility with noise-mitigation techniques is studied, and the scalability of index computation is evaluated using approaches based on density matrices, matrix product states, tensor networks, and real-world devices. The results show consistent reductions in circuit size and runtime and, in many cases, preserved or improved predictive accuracy, with the best trade-offs typically occurring at intermediate thresholds rather than in the baseline circuits or in those compressed more aggressively.

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