Question about the Difference between Loss and Cost Functions in Quantum Computing

In summary, the conversation discusses the difference between a loss function and a cost function for variational quantum algorithms, and whether they can both be presented in a loss/cost landscape. There is uncertainty about whether these terms are interchangeable or have distinct meanings.
  • #1
SaschaSIGI
3
0
Hello,
Im currently hearing a module about quantum computing and Im wondering what is the difference of a loss and cost function for variational quantum algortihms? Both functions also can be presented into a loss/cost landscape? Are they the same ?

Already a big thank you for all the upcoming answers!
 
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  • #2
Hello, and :welcome: !

No answers in three weeks, so there must be something missing in this post.
Perhaps you can provide some context, examples, references ? Be more specific ?

Would be good to read the guidelines even though this isn't homework.

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  • #3
BvU said:
No answers in three weeks, so there must be something missing in this post.
Perhaps you can provide some context, examples, references ? Be more specific ?
I don't think so, the problem is rather that https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loss_function and other sources write
a loss function or cost function (sometimes also called an error function)
And even so there is the feeling that they really are used for the same thing but in slightly different contexts, it is hard to pin this down.
 
  • Informative
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  • #4
I always treat loss/cost/objective function as synonyms until a reference uses both and gives a definition of both that clarifies the distinction.
 
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