China ‘Achieves’ Quantum Breakthrough in AI Model Fine-Tuning

The experiment involved Origin Wukong, a third-generation superconducting quantum computer powered by a 72-qubit chip.

Chinese scientists have successfully fine-tuned a billion-parameter AI model using the Origin Wukong superconducting quantum computer, claiming it to be the first of its kind worldwide. 

This feat was accomplished at the Anhui Quantum Computing Engineering Research Centre, as reported by Global Times. 

The experiment involved Origin Wukong, a third-generation superconducting quantum computer powered by a 72-qubit chip. It was a collaborative effort between Origin Quantum and other research institutions.

The fine-tuning process reportedly involved adapting a large AI model for specialised applications by retraining it on domain-specific data. This was achieved by leveraging the quantum computer’s ability to execute hundreds of parallel quantum tasks per batch. 

The results, as showcased by the research centre, indicated a significant improvement in model performance. A 76% reduction in parameters led to an 8.4% increase in training effectiveness, and the accuracy on a mathematical reasoning task rose from 68% to 82%. 

“It’s like equipping a classical model with a quantum engine, allowing the two to work in synergy,” explained Dou Menghan, vice president of Origin Quantum Computing Technology Co. 

The experiment highlights the potential of quantum computing to enhance AI model efficiency, particularly in reducing the computational resources required for large models. 

This breakthrough is a step forward in addressing ‘computing power anxiety’ associated with large AI models. 

Chen Zhaoyun, a researcher at the Institute of Artificial Intelligence, noted that this marks the first real-world application of quantum computing in large model tasks, proving the capability of existing hardware to support such operations.

Origin Wukong has been operational since January 2024 and has completed over 350,000 quantum computing tasks across various industries, including fluid dynamics, finance, and biomedicine. Users from 139 countries have accessed the system remotely.

In the broader context, this achievement demonstrates quantum computing’s growing capabilities in supporting complex AI tasks. Integrating quantum and classical computing could lead to more efficient and powerful AI applications in fields like medical diagnosis and financial risk management.

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Picture of Sanjana Gupta
Sanjana Gupta
An information designer by training, Sanjana likes to delve into deep tech and enjoys learning about quantum, space, robotics and chips that build up our world. Outside of work, she likes to spend her time with books, especially those that explore the absurd.
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