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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 1, 2025

Using Eye Movements Recorded in the Visual World Paradigm to Explore the Online Processing of Spoken Language
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Extending the Known Region of Nonlocal Boxes that Collapse Communication Complexity.

Pierre Botteron1, Anne Broadbent2, Marc-Olivier Proulx2

  • 1Institut de Mathématiques de Toulouse, Université de Toulouse (Paul Sabatier), France.

Physical Review Letters
|March 1, 2024
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Nonsignaling boxes, theoretical resources for faster-than-light communication, can collapse communication complexity. This study identifies a new condition that expands the known region where this collapse occurs, offering insights into unrealistic theories.

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Area of Science:

  • Quantum Information Theory
  • Foundations of Physics

Background:

  • Nonsignaling boxes (NS) are theoretical constructs in quantum information theory.
  • They generalize quantum correlations and are constrained by the no-faster-than-light communication principle.
  • Certain NS boxes are known to collapse communication complexity (CC), but this is considered physically unattainable.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To find a more effective sufficient condition for a nonlocal box to collapse communication complexity.
  • To extend the previously known region of collapsing boxes.
  • To provide further intuition into which theoretical frameworks might be unrealistic.

Main Methods:

  • Investigated the properties of nonsignaling boxes and their relationship with communication complexity.
  • Derived and analyzed a new sufficient condition for CC collapse.
  • Examined specific slices of the nonsignaling box space.

Main Results:

  • A new, improved sufficient condition for a nonlocal box to collapse communication complexity was identified.
  • The region of collapsing boxes was extended based on this new condition.
  • In certain nonsignaling box slices, the condition was shown to define an area outside an ellipse.

Conclusions:

  • The study successfully identified a broader set of conditions under which communication complexity can be collapsed by nonsignaling boxes.
  • This work refines our understanding of the boundaries between realistic and unrealistic theories in quantum information.
  • The findings contribute to the ongoing effort to understand the limits of computation and communication within physical constraints.