Bayesian agents in iterated quantum games learn shared entanglement levels and achieve quantum advantage or dominant strategies when mutual beliefs align, with strong entanglement beliefs acting as a trust proxy even without actual entanglement.
Quantum-Bayesian Coherence
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
In a quantum-Bayesian take on quantum mechanics, the Born Rule cannot be interpreted as a rule for setting measurement-outcome probabilities from an objective quantum state. But if not, what is the role of the rule? In this paper, we argue that it should be seen as an empirical addition to Bayesian reasoning itself. Particularly, we show how to view the Born Rule as a normative rule in addition to usual Dutch-book coherence. It is a rule that takes into account how one should assign probabilities to the consequences of various intended measurements on a physical system, but explicitly in terms of prior probabilities for and conditional probabilities consequent upon the imagined outcomes of a special counterfactual reference measurement. This interpretation is seen particularly clearly by representing quantum states in terms of probabilities for the outcomes of a fixed, fiducial symmetric informationally complete (SIC) measurement. We further explore the extent to which the general form of the new normative rule implies the full state-space structure of quantum mechanics. It seems to get quite far.
fields
quant-ph 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
Corrects historical and conceptual misapprehensions about QBism and Assumption (Q) in recent discussions of Wigner's Friend thought-experiments.
citing papers explorer
-
Bayesian rational agents in iterated quantum games
Bayesian agents in iterated quantum games learn shared entanglement levels and achieve quantum advantage or dominant strategies when mutual beliefs align, with strong entanglement beliefs acting as a trust proxy even without actual entanglement.
-
On QBism and Assumption (Q)
Corrects historical and conceptual misapprehensions about QBism and Assumption (Q) in recent discussions of Wigner's Friend thought-experiments.