SBIR-STTR Award

QUINN (Quantum INspired Neural Networks)
Award last edited on: 9/19/2022

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
DOD : OSD
Total Award Amount
$1,498,481
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
SCO183-001
Principal Investigator
Ross Hoehn

Company Information

Soar Technology Inc (AKA: SoarTech)

3600 Green Court Suite 600
Ann Arbor, MI 48105
   (734) 627-8072
   info@soartech.com
   www.soartech.com
Location: Multiple
Congr. District: 12
County: Washtenaw

Phase I

Contract Number: N/A
Start Date: 12/20/2021    Completed: 12/19/2023
Phase I year
2022
Phase I Amount
$1
Direct to Phase II

Phase II

Contract Number: HQ003422C0012
Start Date: 12/20/2021    Completed: 12/19/2023
Phase II year
2022
Phase II Amount
$1,498,480
QUINN (Quantum INspired Neural Networks) is a cybersecurity implementation to be deployed alongside a machine learning system (especially a reinforcement learning, active learning, and computer vision system) to harden said system from both standard generative adversarial attacks (noise injection) and cyber-physical attacks. This protection is provided by three unique components that perform attack detection and filtering, identification of attack method and affected aspects, and the cleansing of attack-related features/aspects from the data to recover the original un-altered data instance. These capabilities were informed by a Phase I proof-of-purpose that integrated quantum information theory and classical machine learning protocols to conduct attack filtering with a >86% accuracy (optimized) by exploiting information dense qubit-based ensembles, to leverage a quantum information-based identify modification to data and the fingerprints left by the modification method, and to combine state-of-the-art Generative Adversarial Networks combined with qubit-based information distributions to clean incoming data before it can affect the overall machine learning system. Critically, methods outlined in Phase I conduct these procedures in near-real-time (computational cost of less than a second) in a clandestine manner that cannot be detected, characterized, or circumvented by the adversarial attacker.