Intervention on a fixed-size recurrent state enables contextual control in sequential decisions without memory growth or direct context input.
Contextuality as an External Bookkeeping Cost under Fixed Shared-State Semantics
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
Contextuality is a central feature distinguishing quantum from classical probability theories, but its operational meaning is often stated only qualitatively. In this Letter, we study a simple information-theoretic question: how much additional contextual information must a classical simulation introduce when it tries to keep a shared internal description fixed across contexts? To make this question precise, we analyze a minimal external-label simulation model in which the remaining context dependence is carried only by an auxiliary label. For this model, we define an obstruction cost as the minimum mutual information between the context and the auxiliary label required to reproduce the observed statistics. We then prove a conservative quantitative lower bound: any linear witness that separates the observed statistics from the zero-obstruction set yields a positive lower bound on this cost. We do not claim that this bound is tight, and we do not claim that the simulation model covers every possible classical architecture. Its role is narrower and more explicit: under fixed shared-state semantics, contextuality can be read as a certificate of irreducible external bookkeeping cost in a simple and well-defined simulation model.
years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
Simulation at N=20 across 500 seeds finds that adaptive synchronization, not quarantine, primarily drives final agreement and recovery-time improvement after partitions in noisy regimes.
citing papers explorer
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Contextual Control without Memory Growth in a Context-Switching Task
Intervention on a fixed-size recurrent state enables contextual control in sequential decisions without memory growth or direct context input.
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Contextual Chain: Single-State Ledger Design for Mobile/IoT Networks with Frequent Partitions
Simulation at N=20 across 500 seeds finds that adaptive synchronization, not quarantine, primarily drives final agreement and recovery-time improvement after partitions in noisy regimes.