Classical, quantum and nonsignalling resources in bipartite games (Q387029): Difference between revisions

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The paper studies bipartite games that arise in the context of nonlocality with the help of graph theory. The main results show that deciding whether a no-communication classical winning strategy exists for certain games (called forbidden-edge and covering games) is NP-complete, while the problem of deciding if these games admit a nonsignalling winning strategy is in P. The authors discuss relations between quantum winning strategies and orthogonality graphs. They also show that every pseudotelepathy game (a forbidden-edge game is called a pseudotelepathy game if Alice and Bob have a winning strategy using shared entanglement) yields both a proof of the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem and an instance of a two-prover interactive proof system that is classically sound, but that becomes unsound when provers use shared entanglement.
Property / review text: The paper studies bipartite games that arise in the context of nonlocality with the help of graph theory. The main results show that deciding whether a no-communication classical winning strategy exists for certain games (called forbidden-edge and covering games) is NP-complete, while the problem of deciding if these games admit a nonsignalling winning strategy is in P. The authors discuss relations between quantum winning strategies and orthogonality graphs. They also show that every pseudotelepathy game (a forbidden-edge game is called a pseudotelepathy game if Alice and Bob have a winning strategy using shared entanglement) yields both a proof of the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem and an instance of a two-prover interactive proof system that is classically sound, but that becomes unsound when provers use shared entanglement. / rank
 
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Property / reviewed by
 
Property / reviewed by: Anatolij Dvurečenskij / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 05C57 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 91A43 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 05C85 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 68Q25 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 81P15 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 94A15 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH DE Number
 
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6237436 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
nonlocality
Property / zbMATH Keywords: nonlocality / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
Bell theorems
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Bell theorems / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
pseudotelepathy
Property / zbMATH Keywords: pseudotelepathy / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
interactive proof systems
Property / zbMATH Keywords: interactive proof systems / rank
 
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Revision as of 13:07, 29 June 2023

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Classical, quantum and nonsignalling resources in bipartite games
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    Classical, quantum and nonsignalling resources in bipartite games (English)
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    11 December 2013
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    The paper studies bipartite games that arise in the context of nonlocality with the help of graph theory. The main results show that deciding whether a no-communication classical winning strategy exists for certain games (called forbidden-edge and covering games) is NP-complete, while the problem of deciding if these games admit a nonsignalling winning strategy is in P. The authors discuss relations between quantum winning strategies and orthogonality graphs. They also show that every pseudotelepathy game (a forbidden-edge game is called a pseudotelepathy game if Alice and Bob have a winning strategy using shared entanglement) yields both a proof of the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem and an instance of a two-prover interactive proof system that is classically sound, but that becomes unsound when provers use shared entanglement.
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    nonlocality
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    Bell theorems
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    pseudotelepathy
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    interactive proof systems
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