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Multiperspective reuse prediction

3 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

3 Pith papers citing it

citation-role summary

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citation-polarity summary

years

2026 2 2025 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 3

roles

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polarities

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representative citing papers

Sdim: A Qudit Stabilizer Simulator

quant-ph · 2025-11-16 · unverdicted · novelty 8.0

Sdim is the first open-source qudit stabilizer simulator supporting all dimensions, enabling circuit evaluation and sampling for qudit fault-tolerant quantum computing research.

Enhancing Instruction Prefetching via Cache and TLB Management

cs.AR · 2026-05-12 · unverdicted · novelty 7.0

IP-CaT jointly optimizes TLB and cache management for L1I prefetching via a translation prefetch buffer and trimodal replacement policy, yielding 8.7% geomean speedup over EPI across 105 server workloads.

Price and Payoff: Non-Determinism in Fault Tolerant Quantum Computation

quant-ph · 2026-05-08 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

Stochastic magic-state production in fault-tolerant quantum computing inflates execution time but reduces peak resource demand, allowing stochastic-aware factory allocation to cut space-time volume by up to 27% and factories by up to 30% versus deterministic optima.

citing papers explorer

Showing 3 of 3 citing papers.

  • Sdim: A Qudit Stabilizer Simulator quant-ph · 2025-11-16 · unverdicted · none · ref 45

    Sdim is the first open-source qudit stabilizer simulator supporting all dimensions, enabling circuit evaluation and sampling for qudit fault-tolerant quantum computing research.

  • Enhancing Instruction Prefetching via Cache and TLB Management cs.AR · 2026-05-12 · unverdicted · none · ref 70

    IP-CaT jointly optimizes TLB and cache management for L1I prefetching via a translation prefetch buffer and trimodal replacement policy, yielding 8.7% geomean speedup over EPI across 105 server workloads.

  • Price and Payoff: Non-Determinism in Fault Tolerant Quantum Computation quant-ph · 2026-05-08 · unverdicted · none · ref 24

    Stochastic magic-state production in fault-tolerant quantum computing inflates execution time but reduces peak resource demand, allowing stochastic-aware factory allocation to cut space-time volume by up to 27% and factories by up to 30% versus deterministic optima.