Coalitions in the quantum minority game: classical cheats and quantum bullies

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Publication:601403

DOI10.1016/J.PHYSLETA.2006.10.007zbMATH Open1197.81075arXivquant-ph/0608096OpenAlexW1994327272WikidataQ62042958 ScholiaQ62042958MaRDI QIDQ601403FDOQ601403


Authors: Adrian P. Flitney, Andrew D. Greentree Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 28 October 2010

Published in: Physics Letters. A (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: In a one-off Minority game, when a group of players agree to collaborate they gain an advantage over the remaining players. We consider the advantage obtained in a quantum Minority game by a coalition sharing an initially entangled state versus that obtained by a coalition that uses classical communication to arrive at an optimal group strategy. In a model of the quantum Minority game where the final measurement basis is randomized, quantum coalitions outperform classical ones when carried out by up to four players, but an unrestricted amount of classical communication is better for larger coalition sizes.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0608096




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