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Quantum Bayesianism

In physics and the philosophy of physics, quantum Bayesianism is a collection of related approaches to the interpretation of quantum mechanics, the most prominent of which is QBism (pronounced "cubism"). QBism is an interpretation that takes an agent's actions and experiences as the central concerns of the theory. QBism deals with common questions in the interpretation of quantum theory about the nature of wavefunction superposition, quantum measurement, and entanglement.[1][2] According to QBism, many, but not all, aspects of the quantum formalism are subjective in nature. For example, in this interpretation, a quantum state is not an element of reality—instead, it represents the degrees of belief an agent has about the possible outcomes of measurements. For this reason, some philosophers of science have deemed QBism a form of anti-realism.[3][4] The originators of the interpretation disagree with this characterization, proposing instead that the theory more properly aligns with a kind of realism they call "participatory realism", wherein reality consists of more than can be captured by any putative third-person account of it.[5][6]

Each point in the Bloch ball is a possible quantum state for a qubit. In QBism, all quantum states are representations of personal probabilities.

This interpretation is distinguished by its use of a subjective Bayesian account of probabilities to understand the quantum mechanical Born rule as a normative addition to good decision-making. Rooted in the prior work of Carlton Caves, Christopher Fuchs, and Rüdiger Schack during the early 2000s, QBism itself is primarily associated with Fuchs and Schack and has more recently been adopted by David Mermin.[7] QBism draws from the fields of quantum information and Bayesian probability and aims to eliminate the interpretational conundrums that have beset quantum theory. The QBist interpretation is historically derivative of the views of the various physicists that are often grouped together as "the" Copenhagen interpretation,[8][9] but is itself distinct from them.[9][10] Theodor Hänsch has characterized QBism as sharpening those older views and making them more consistent.[11]

More generally, any work that uses a Bayesian or personalist (a.k.a. "subjective") treatment of the probabilities that appear in quantum theory is also sometimes called quantum Bayesian. QBism, in particular, has been referred to as "the radical Bayesian interpretation".[12]

In addition to presenting an interpretation of the existing mathematical structure of quantum theory, some QBists have advocated a research program of reconstructing quantum theory from basic physical principles whose QBist character is manifest. The ultimate goal of this research is to identify what aspects of the ontology of the physical world make quantum theory a good tool for agents to use.[13] However, the QBist interpretation itself, as described in § Core positions, does not depend on any particular reconstruction.

History and development edit

 
British philosopher, mathematician, and economist Frank Ramsey, whose interpretation of probability theory closely matches the one adopted by QBism.[14]

E. T. Jaynes, a promoter of the use of Bayesian probability in statistical physics, once suggested that quantum theory is "[a] peculiar mixture describing in part realities of Nature, in part incomplete human information about Nature—all scrambled up by Heisenberg and Bohr into an omelette that nobody has seen how to unscramble".[15] QBism developed out of efforts to separate these parts using the tools of quantum information theory and personalist Bayesian probability theory.

There are many interpretations of probability theory. Broadly speaking, these interpretations fall into one of three categories: those which assert that a probability is an objective property of reality (the propensity school), those who assert that probability is an objective property of the measuring process (frequentists), and those which assert that a probability is a cognitive construct which an agent may use to quantify their ignorance or degree of belief in a proposition (Bayesians). QBism begins by asserting that all probabilities, even those appearing in quantum theory, are most properly viewed as members of the latter category. Specifically, QBism adopts a personalist Bayesian interpretation along the lines of Italian mathematician Bruno de Finetti[16] and English philosopher Frank Ramsey.[17][18]

According to QBists, the advantages of adopting this view of probability are twofold. First, for QBists the role of quantum states, such as the wavefunctions of particles, is to efficiently encode probabilities; so quantum states are ultimately degrees of belief themselves. (If one considers any single measurement that is a minimal, informationally complete positive operator-valued measure (POVM), this is especially clear: A quantum state is mathematically equivalent to a single probability distribution, the distribution over the possible outcomes of that measurement.[19]) Regarding quantum states as degrees of belief implies that the event of a quantum state changing when a measurement occurs—the "collapse of the wave function"—is simply the agent updating her beliefs in response to a new experience.[13] Second, it suggests that quantum mechanics can be thought of as a local theory, because the Einstein–Podolsky–Rosen (EPR) criterion of reality can be rejected. The EPR criterion states: "If, without in any way disturbing a system, we can predict with certainty (i.e., with probability equal to unity) the value of a physical quantity, then there exists an element of reality corresponding to that quantity."[20] Arguments that quantum mechanics should be considered a nonlocal theory depend upon this principle, but to a QBist, it is invalid, because a personalist Bayesian considers all probabilities, even those equal to unity, to be degrees of belief.[21][22] Therefore, while many interpretations of quantum theory conclude that quantum mechanics is a nonlocal theory, QBists do not.[23]

Christopher Fuchs introduced the term "QBism" and outlined the interpretation in more or less its present form in 2010,[24] carrying further and demanding consistency of ideas broached earlier, notably in publications from 2002.[25][26] Several subsequent works have expanded and elaborated upon these foundations, notably a Reviews of Modern Physics article by Fuchs and Schack;[19] an American Journal of Physics article by Fuchs, Mermin, and Schack;[23] and Enrico Fermi Summer School[27] lecture notes by Fuchs and Stacey.[22]

Prior to the 2010 article, the term "quantum Bayesianism" was used to describe the developments which have since led to QBism in its present form. However, as noted above, QBism subscribes to a particular kind of Bayesianism which does not suit everyone who might apply Bayesian reasoning to quantum theory (see, for example, § Other uses of Bayesian probability in quantum physics below). Consequently, Fuchs chose to call the interpretation "QBism", pronounced "cubism", preserving the Bayesian spirit via the CamelCase in the first two letters, but distancing it from Bayesianism more broadly. As this neologism is a homophone of Cubism the art movement, it has motivated conceptual comparisons between the two,[28] and media coverage of QBism has been illustrated with art by Picasso[7] and Gris.[29] However, QBism itself was not influenced or motivated by Cubism and has no lineage to a potential connection between Cubist art and Bohr's views on quantum theory.[30]

Core positions edit

According to QBism, quantum theory is a tool which an agent may use to help manage their expectations, more like probability theory than a conventional physical theory.[13] Quantum theory, QBism claims, is fundamentally a guide for decision making which has been shaped by some aspects of physical reality. Chief among the tenets of QBism are the following:[31]

  1. All probabilities, including those equal to zero or one, are valuations that an agent ascribes to their degrees of belief in possible outcomes. As they define and update probabilities, quantum states (density operators), channels (completely positive trace-preserving maps), and measurements (positive operator-valued measures) are also the personal judgements of an agent.
  2. The Born rule is normative, not descriptive. It is a relation to which an agent should strive to adhere in their probability and quantum-state assignments.
  3. Quantum measurement outcomes are personal experiences for the agent gambling on them. Different agents may confer and agree upon the consequences of a measurement, but the outcome is the experience each of them individually has.
  4. A measurement apparatus is conceptually an extension of the agent. It should be considered analogous to a sense organ or prosthetic limb—simultaneously a tool and a part of the individual.

Reception and criticism edit

 
Jean Metzinger, 1912, Danseuse au café. One advocate of QBism, physicist David Mermin, describes his rationale for choosing that term over the older and more general "quantum Bayesianism": "I prefer [the] term 'QBist' because [this] view of quantum mechanics differs from others as radically as cubism differs from renaissance painting ..."[28]

Reactions to the QBist interpretation have ranged from enthusiastic[13][28] to strongly negative.[32] Some who have criticized QBism claim that it fails to meet the goal of resolving paradoxes in quantum theory. Bacciagaluppi argues that QBism's treatment of measurement outcomes does not ultimately resolve the issue of nonlocality,[33] and Jaeger finds QBism's supposition that the interpretation of probability is key for the resolution to be unnatural and unconvincing.[12] Norsen[34] has accused QBism of solipsism, and Wallace[35] identifies QBism as an instance of instrumentalism; QBists have argued insistently that these characterizations are misunderstandings, and that QBism is neither solipsist nor instrumentalist.[17][36] A critical article by Nauenberg[32] in the American Journal of Physics prompted a reply by Fuchs, Mermin, and Schack.[37] Some assert that there may be inconsistencies; for example, Stairs argues that when a probability assignment equals one, it cannot be a degree of belief as QBists say.[38] Further, while also raising concerns about the treatment of probability-one assignments, Timpson suggests that QBism may result in a reduction of explanatory power as compared to other interpretations.[1] Fuchs and Schack replied to these concerns in a later article.[39] Mermin advocated QBism in a 2012 Physics Today article,[2] which prompted considerable discussion. Several further critiques of QBism which arose in response to Mermin's article, and Mermin's replies to these comments, may be found in the Physics Today readers' forum.[40][41] Section 2 of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on QBism also contains a summary of objections to the interpretation, and some replies.[42] Others are opposed to QBism on more general philosophical grounds; for example, Mohrhoff criticizes QBism from the standpoint of Kantian philosophy.[43]

Certain authors find QBism internally self-consistent, but do not subscribe to the interpretation.[44] For example, Marchildon finds QBism well-defined in a way that, to him, many-worlds interpretations are not, but he ultimately prefers a Bohmian interpretation.[45] Similarly, Schlosshauer and Claringbold state that QBism is a consistent interpretation of quantum mechanics, but do not offer a verdict on whether it should be preferred.[46] In addition, some agree with most, but perhaps not all, of the core tenets of QBism; Barnum's position,[47] as well as Appleby's,[48] are examples.

Popularized or semi-popularized media coverage of QBism has appeared in New Scientist,[49] Scientific American,[50] Nature,[51] Science News,[52] the FQXi Community,[53] the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung,[29] Quanta Magazine,[16] Aeon,[54] Discover,[55] Nautilus Quarterly,[56] and Big Think.[57] In 2018, two popular-science books about the interpretation of quantum mechanics, Ball's Beyond Weird and Ananthaswamy's Through Two Doors at Once, devoted sections to QBism.[58][59] Furthermore, Harvard University Press published a popularized treatment of the subject, QBism: The Future of Quantum Physics, in 2016.[13]

The philosophy literature has also discussed QBism from the viewpoints of structural realism and of phenomenology.[60][61][62]

Ballentine argues that "the initial assumption of QBism is not valid" because the inferential probability of Bayesian theory used by QBism is not applicable to quantum mechanics.[63]

Relation to other interpretations edit

 
Group photo from the 2005 University of Konstanz conference Being Bayesian in a Quantum World.

Copenhagen interpretations edit

The views of many physicists (Bohr, Heisenberg, Rosenfeld, von Weizsäcker, Peres, etc.) are often grouped together as the "Copenhagen interpretation" of quantum mechanics. Several authors have deprecated this terminology, claiming that it is historically misleading and obscures differences between physicists that are as important as their similarities.[14][64] QBism shares many characteristics in common with the ideas often labeled as "the Copenhagen interpretation", but the differences are important; to conflate them or to regard QBism as a minor modification of the points of view of Bohr or Heisenberg, for instance, would be a substantial misrepresentation.[10][31]

QBism takes probabilities to be personal judgments of the individual agent who is using quantum mechanics. This contrasts with older Copenhagen-type views, which hold that probabilities are given by quantum states that are in turn fixed by objective facts about preparation procedures.[13][65] QBism considers a measurement to be any action that an agent takes to elicit a response from the world and the outcome of that measurement to be the experience the world's response induces back on that agent. As a consequence, communication between agents is the only means by which different agents can attempt to compare their internal experiences. Most variants of the Copenhagen interpretation, however, hold that the outcomes of experiments are agent-independent pieces of reality for anyone to access.[10] QBism claims that these points on which it differs from previous Copenhagen-type interpretations resolve the obscurities that many critics have found in the latter, by changing the role that quantum theory plays (even though QBism does not yet provide a specific underlying ontology). Specifically, QBism posits that quantum theory is a normative tool which an agent may use to better navigate reality, rather than a set of mechanics governing it.[22][42]

Other epistemic interpretations edit

Approaches to quantum theory, like QBism,[66] which treat quantum states as expressions of information, knowledge, belief, or expectation are called "epistemic" interpretations.[6] These approaches differ from each other in what they consider quantum states to be information or expectations "about", as well as in the technical features of the mathematics they employ. Furthermore, not all authors who advocate views of this type propose an answer to the question of what the information represented in quantum states concerns. In the words of the paper that introduced the Spekkens Toy Model:

if a quantum state is a state of knowledge, and it is not knowledge of local and noncontextual hidden variables, then what is it knowledge about? We do not at present have a good answer to this question. We shall therefore remain completely agnostic about the nature of the reality to which the knowledge represented by quantum states pertains. This is not to say that the question is not important. Rather, we see the epistemic approach as an unfinished project, and this question as the central obstacle to its completion. Nonetheless, we argue that even in the absence of an answer to this question, a case can be made for the epistemic view. The key is that one can hope to identify phenomena that are characteristic of states of incomplete knowledge regardless of what this knowledge is about.[67]

Leifer and Spekkens propose a way of treating quantum probabilities as Bayesian probabilities, thereby considering quantum states as epistemic, which they state is "closely aligned in its philosophical starting point" with QBism.[68] However, they remain deliberately agnostic about what physical properties or entities quantum states are information (or beliefs) about, as opposed to QBism, which offers an answer to that question.[68] Another approach, advocated by Bub and Pitowsky, argues that quantum states are information about propositions within event spaces that form non-Boolean lattices.[69] On occasion, the proposals of Bub and Pitowsky are also called "quantum Bayesianism".[70]

Zeilinger and Brukner have also proposed an interpretation of quantum mechanics in which "information" is a fundamental concept, and in which quantum states are epistemic quantities.[71] Unlike QBism, the Brukner–Zeilinger interpretation treats some probabilities as objectively fixed. In the Brukner–Zeilinger interpretation, a quantum state represents the information that a hypothetical observer in possession of all possible data would have. Put another way, a quantum state belongs in their interpretation to an optimally informed agent, whereas in QBism, any agent can formulate a state to encode her own expectations.[72] Despite this difference, in Cabello's classification, the proposals of Zeilinger and Brukner are also designated as "participatory realism", as QBism and the Copenhagen-type interpretations are.[6]

Bayesian, or epistemic, interpretations of quantum probabilities were proposed in the early 1990s by Baez and Youssef.[73][74]

Von Neumann's views edit

R. F. Streater argued that "[t]he first quantum Bayesian was von Neumann", basing that claim on von Neumann's textbook The Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics.[75] Blake Stacey disagrees, arguing that the views expressed in that book on the nature of quantum states and the interpretation of probability are not compatible with QBism, or indeed, with any position that might be called quantum Bayesianism.[14]

Relational quantum mechanics edit

Comparisons have also been made between QBism and the relational quantum mechanics (RQM) espoused by Carlo Rovelli and others.[76][77] In both QBism and RQM, quantum states are not intrinsic properties of physical systems.[78] Both QBism and RQM deny the existence of an absolute, universal wavefunction. Furthermore, both QBism and RQM insist that quantum mechanics is a fundamentally local theory.[23][79] In addition, Rovelli, like several QBist authors, advocates reconstructing quantum theory from physical principles in order to bring clarity to the subject of quantum foundations.[80] (The QBist approaches to doing so are different from Rovelli's, and are described below.) One important distinction between the two interpretations is their philosophy of probability: RQM does not adopt the Ramsey–de Finetti school of personalist Bayesianism.[6][17] Moreover, RQM does not insist that a measurement outcome is necessarily an agent's experience.[17]

Other uses of Bayesian probability in quantum physics edit

QBism should be distinguished from other applications of Bayesian inference in quantum physics, and from quantum analogues of Bayesian inference.[19][73] For example, some in the field of computer science have introduced a kind of quantum Bayesian network, which they argue could have applications in "medical diagnosis, monitoring of processes, and genetics".[81][82] Bayesian inference has also been applied in quantum theory for updating probability densities over quantum states,[83] and MaxEnt methods have been used in similar ways.[73][84] Bayesian methods for quantum state and process tomography are an active area of research.[85]

Technical developments and reconstructing quantum theory edit

Conceptual concerns about the interpretation of quantum mechanics and the meaning of probability have motivated technical work. A quantum version of the de Finetti theorem, introduced by Caves, Fuchs, and Schack (independently reproving a result found using different means by Størmer[86]) to provide a Bayesian understanding of the idea of an "unknown quantum state",[87][88] has found application elsewhere, in topics like quantum key distribution[89] and entanglement detection.[90]

Adherents of several interpretations of quantum mechanics, QBism included, have been motivated to reconstruct quantum theory. The goal of these research efforts has been to identify a new set of axioms or postulates from which the mathematical structure of quantum theory can be derived, in the hope that with such a reformulation, the features of nature which made quantum theory the way it is might be more easily identified.[51][91] Although the core tenets of QBism do not demand such a reconstruction, some QBists—Fuchs,[26] in particular—have argued that the task should be pursued.

One topic prominent in the reconstruction effort is the set of mathematical structures known as symmetric, informationally-complete, positive operator-valued measures (SIC-POVMs). QBist foundational research stimulated interest in these structures, which now have applications in quantum theory outside of foundational studies[92] and in pure mathematics.[93]

The most extensively explored QBist reformulation of quantum theory involves the use of SIC-POVMs to rewrite quantum states (either pure or mixed) as a set of probabilities defined over the outcomes of a "Bureau of Standards" measurement.[94][95] That is, if one expresses a density matrix as a probability distribution over the outcomes of a SIC-POVM experiment, one can reproduce all the statistical predictions implied by the density matrix from the SIC-POVM probabilities instead.[96] The Born rule then takes the role of relating one valid probability distribution to another, rather than of deriving probabilities from something apparently more fundamental. Fuchs, Schack, and others have taken to calling this restatement of the Born rule the urgleichung, from the German for "primal equation" (see Ur- prefix), because of the central role it plays in their reconstruction of quantum theory.[19][97][98]

The following discussion presumes some familiarity with the mathematics of quantum information theory, and in particular, the modeling of measurement procedures by POVMs. Consider a quantum system to which is associated a  -dimensional Hilbert space. If a set of   rank-1 projectors   satisfying

 
exists, then one may form a SIC-POVM  . An arbitrary quantum state   may be written as a linear combination of the SIC projectors
 
where   is the Born rule probability for obtaining SIC measurement outcome   implied by the state assignment  . We follow the convention that operators have hats while experiences (that is, measurement outcomes) do not. Now consider an arbitrary quantum measurement, denoted by the POVM  . The urgleichung is the expression obtained from forming the Born rule probabilities,  , for the outcomes of this quantum measurement,
 
where   is the Born rule probability for obtaining outcome   implied by the state assignment  . The   term may be understood to be a conditional probability in a cascaded measurement scenario: Imagine that an agent plans to perform two measurements, first a SIC measurement and then the   measurement. After obtaining an outcome from the SIC measurement, the agent will update her state assignment to a new quantum state   before performing the second measurement. If she uses the Lüders rule[99] for state update and obtains outcome   from the SIC measurement, then  . Thus the probability for obtaining outcome   for the second measurement conditioned on obtaining outcome   for the SIC measurement is  .

Note that the urgleichung is structurally very similar to the law of total probability, which is the expression

 
They functionally differ only by a dimension-dependent affine transformation of the SIC probability vector. As QBism says that quantum theory is an empirically-motivated normative addition to probability theory, Fuchs and others find the appearance of a structure in quantum theory analogous to one in probability theory to be an indication that a reformulation featuring the urgleichung prominently may help to reveal the properties of nature which made quantum theory so successful.[19][22]

It is important to recognize that the urgleichung does not replace the law of total probability. Rather, the urgleichung and the law of total probability apply in different scenarios because   and   refer to different situations.   is the probability that an agent assigns for obtaining outcome   on her second of two planned measurements, that is, for obtaining outcome   after first making the SIC measurement and obtaining one of the   outcomes.  , on the other hand, is the probability an agent assigns for obtaining outcome   when she does not plan to first make the SIC measurement. The law of total probability is a consequence of coherence within the operational context of performing the two measurements as described. The urgleichung, in contrast, is a relation between different contexts which finds its justification in the predictive success of quantum physics.

The SIC representation of quantum states also provides a reformulation of quantum dynamics. Consider a quantum state   with SIC representation  . The time evolution of this state is found by applying a unitary operator   to form the new state  , which has the SIC representation

 

The second equality is written in the Heisenberg picture of quantum dynamics, with respect to which the time evolution of a quantum system is captured by the probabilities associated with a rotated SIC measurement   of the original quantum state  . Then the Schrödinger equation is completely captured in the urgleichung for this measurement:

 
In these terms, the Schrödinger equation is an instance of the Born rule applied to the passing of time; an agent uses it to relate how she will gamble on informationally complete measurements potentially performed at different times.

Those QBists who find this approach promising are pursuing a complete reconstruction of quantum theory featuring the urgleichung as the key postulate.[97] (The urgleichung has also been discussed in the context of category theory.[100]) Comparisons between this approach and others not associated with QBism (or indeed with any particular interpretation) can be found in a book chapter by Fuchs and Stacey[101] and an article by Appleby et al.[97] As of 2017, alternative QBist reconstruction efforts are in the beginning stages.[102]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Exotic Probability Theories and Quantum Mechanics: References
  • Notes on a Paulian Idea: Foundational, Historical, Anecdotal and Forward-Looking Thoughts on the Quantum – Cerro Grande Fire Series, Volume 1
  • My Struggles with the Block Universe – Cerro Grande Fire Series, Volume 2
  • Why the multiverse is all about you – The Philosopher's Zone interview with Fuchs
  • A Private View of Quantum Reality – Quanta Magazine interview with Fuchs
  • Rüdiger Schack on QBism in The Conversation
  • Participatory Realism – 2017 conference at the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study
  • – 2005 conference at the University of Konstanz
  • Cabello, Adán (September 2017). "El puzle de la teoría cuántica: ¿Es posible zanjar científicamente el debate sobre la naturaleza del mundo cuántico?". Investigación y Ciencia.
  • Fuchs, Christopher (presenter); Stacey, Blake (editor); Thisdell, Bill (editor) (2018-04-25). Some Tenets of QBism. YouTube. Retrieved 2018-05-17.
  • DeBrota, John B.; Stacey, Blake C. (2018-10-31). "FAQBism". arXiv:1810.13401 [quant-ph].

quantum, bayesianism, qbism, redirects, here, confused, with, cubism, physics, philosophy, physics, quantum, bayesianism, collection, related, approaches, interpretation, quantum, mechanics, most, prominent, which, qbism, pronounced, cubism, qbism, interpretat. QBism redirects here Not to be confused with Cubism In physics and the philosophy of physics quantum Bayesianism is a collection of related approaches to the interpretation of quantum mechanics the most prominent of which is QBism pronounced cubism QBism is an interpretation that takes an agent s actions and experiences as the central concerns of the theory QBism deals with common questions in the interpretation of quantum theory about the nature of wavefunction superposition quantum measurement and entanglement 1 2 According to QBism many but not all aspects of the quantum formalism are subjective in nature For example in this interpretation a quantum state is not an element of reality instead it represents the degrees of belief an agent has about the possible outcomes of measurements For this reason some philosophers of science have deemed QBism a form of anti realism 3 4 The originators of the interpretation disagree with this characterization proposing instead that the theory more properly aligns with a kind of realism they call participatory realism wherein reality consists of more than can be captured by any putative third person account of it 5 6 Each point in the Bloch ball is a possible quantum state for a qubit In QBism all quantum states are representations of personal probabilities This interpretation is distinguished by its use of a subjective Bayesian account of probabilities to understand the quantum mechanical Born rule as a normative addition to good decision making Rooted in the prior work of Carlton Caves Christopher Fuchs and Rudiger Schack during the early 2000s QBism itself is primarily associated with Fuchs and Schack and has more recently been adopted by David Mermin 7 QBism draws from the fields of quantum information and Bayesian probability and aims to eliminate the interpretational conundrums that have beset quantum theory The QBist interpretation is historically derivative of the views of the various physicists that are often grouped together as the Copenhagen interpretation 8 9 but is itself distinct from them 9 10 Theodor Hansch has characterized QBism as sharpening those older views and making them more consistent 11 More generally any work that uses a Bayesian or personalist a k a subjective treatment of the probabilities that appear in quantum theory is also sometimes called quantum Bayesian QBism in particular has been referred to as the radical Bayesian interpretation 12 In addition to presenting an interpretation of the existing mathematical structure of quantum theory some QBists have advocated a research program of reconstructing quantum theory from basic physical principles whose QBist character is manifest The ultimate goal of this research is to identify what aspects of the ontology of the physical world make quantum theory a good tool for agents to use 13 However the QBist interpretation itself as described in Core positions does not depend on any particular reconstruction Contents 1 History and development 2 Core positions 3 Reception and criticism 4 Relation to other interpretations 4 1 Copenhagen interpretations 4 2 Other epistemic interpretations 4 3 Von Neumann s views 4 4 Relational quantum mechanics 4 5 Other uses of Bayesian probability in quantum physics 5 Technical developments and reconstructing quantum theory 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory and development edit nbsp British philosopher mathematician and economist Frank Ramsey whose interpretation of probability theory closely matches the one adopted by QBism 14 E T Jaynes a promoter of the use of Bayesian probability in statistical physics once suggested that quantum theory is a peculiar mixture describing in part realities of Nature in part incomplete human information about Nature all scrambled up by Heisenberg and Bohr into an omelette that nobody has seen how to unscramble 15 QBism developed out of efforts to separate these parts using the tools of quantum information theory and personalist Bayesian probability theory There are many interpretations of probability theory Broadly speaking these interpretations fall into one of three categories those which assert that a probability is an objective property of reality the propensity school those who assert that probability is an objective property of the measuring process frequentists and those which assert that a probability is a cognitive construct which an agent may use to quantify their ignorance or degree of belief in a proposition Bayesians QBism begins by asserting that all probabilities even those appearing in quantum theory are most properly viewed as members of the latter category Specifically QBism adopts a personalist Bayesian interpretation along the lines of Italian mathematician Bruno de Finetti 16 and English philosopher Frank Ramsey 17 18 According to QBists the advantages of adopting this view of probability are twofold First for QBists the role of quantum states such as the wavefunctions of particles is to efficiently encode probabilities so quantum states are ultimately degrees of belief themselves If one considers any single measurement that is a minimal informationally complete positive operator valued measure POVM this is especially clear A quantum state is mathematically equivalent to a single probability distribution the distribution over the possible outcomes of that measurement 19 Regarding quantum states as degrees of belief implies that the event of a quantum state changing when a measurement occurs the collapse of the wave function is simply the agent updating her beliefs in response to a new experience 13 Second it suggests that quantum mechanics can be thought of as a local theory because the Einstein Podolsky Rosen EPR criterion of reality can be rejected The EPR criterion states If without in any way disturbing a system we can predict with certainty i e with probability equal to unity the value of a physical quantity then there exists an element of reality corresponding to that quantity 20 Arguments that quantum mechanics should be considered a nonlocal theory depend upon this principle but to a QBist it is invalid because a personalist Bayesian considers all probabilities even those equal to unity to be degrees of belief 21 22 Therefore while many interpretations of quantum theory conclude that quantum mechanics is a nonlocal theory QBists do not 23 Christopher Fuchs introduced the term QBism and outlined the interpretation in more or less its present form in 2010 24 carrying further and demanding consistency of ideas broached earlier notably in publications from 2002 25 26 Several subsequent works have expanded and elaborated upon these foundations notably a Reviews of Modern Physics article by Fuchs and Schack 19 an American Journal of Physics article by Fuchs Mermin and Schack 23 and Enrico Fermi Summer School 27 lecture notes by Fuchs and Stacey 22 Prior to the 2010 article the term quantum Bayesianism was used to describe the developments which have since led to QBism in its present form However as noted above QBism subscribes to a particular kind of Bayesianism which does not suit everyone who might apply Bayesian reasoning to quantum theory see for example Other uses of Bayesian probability in quantum physics below Consequently Fuchs chose to call the interpretation QBism pronounced cubism preserving the Bayesian spirit via the CamelCase in the first two letters but distancing it from Bayesianism more broadly As this neologism is a homophone of Cubism the art movement it has motivated conceptual comparisons between the two 28 and media coverage of QBism has been illustrated with art by Picasso 7 and Gris 29 However QBism itself was not influenced or motivated by Cubism and has no lineage to a potential connection between Cubist art and Bohr s views on quantum theory 30 Core positions editAccording to QBism quantum theory is a tool which an agent may use to help manage their expectations more like probability theory than a conventional physical theory 13 Quantum theory QBism claims is fundamentally a guide for decision making which has been shaped by some aspects of physical reality Chief among the tenets of QBism are the following 31 All probabilities including those equal to zero or one are valuations that an agent ascribes to their degrees of belief in possible outcomes As they define and update probabilities quantum states density operators channels completely positive trace preserving maps and measurements positive operator valued measures are also the personal judgements of an agent The Born rule is normative not descriptive It is a relation to which an agent should strive to adhere in their probability and quantum state assignments Quantum measurement outcomes are personal experiences for the agent gambling on them Different agents may confer and agree upon the consequences of a measurement but the outcome is the experience each of them individually has A measurement apparatus is conceptually an extension of the agent It should be considered analogous to a sense organ or prosthetic limb simultaneously a tool and a part of the individual Reception and criticism edit nbsp Jean Metzinger 1912 Danseuse au cafe One advocate of QBism physicist David Mermin describes his rationale for choosing that term over the older and more general quantum Bayesianism I prefer the term QBist because this view of quantum mechanics differs from others as radically as cubism differs from renaissance painting 28 Reactions to the QBist interpretation have ranged from enthusiastic 13 28 to strongly negative 32 Some who have criticized QBism claim that it fails to meet the goal of resolving paradoxes in quantum theory Bacciagaluppi argues that QBism s treatment of measurement outcomes does not ultimately resolve the issue of nonlocality 33 and Jaeger finds QBism s supposition that the interpretation of probability is key for the resolution to be unnatural and unconvincing 12 Norsen 34 has accused QBism of solipsism and Wallace 35 identifies QBism as an instance of instrumentalism QBists have argued insistently that these characterizations are misunderstandings and that QBism is neither solipsist nor instrumentalist 17 36 A critical article by Nauenberg 32 in the American Journal of Physics prompted a reply by Fuchs Mermin and Schack 37 Some assert that there may be inconsistencies for example Stairs argues that when a probability assignment equals one it cannot be a degree of belief as QBists say 38 Further while also raising concerns about the treatment of probability one assignments Timpson suggests that QBism may result in a reduction of explanatory power as compared to other interpretations 1 Fuchs and Schack replied to these concerns in a later article 39 Mermin advocated QBism in a 2012 Physics Today article 2 which prompted considerable discussion Several further critiques of QBism which arose in response to Mermin s article and Mermin s replies to these comments may be found in the Physics Today readers forum 40 41 Section 2 of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on QBism also contains a summary of objections to the interpretation and some replies 42 Others are opposed to QBism on more general philosophical grounds for example Mohrhoff criticizes QBism from the standpoint of Kantian philosophy 43 Certain authors find QBism internally self consistent but do not subscribe to the interpretation 44 For example Marchildon finds QBism well defined in a way that to him many worlds interpretations are not but he ultimately prefers a Bohmian interpretation 45 Similarly Schlosshauer and Claringbold state that QBism is a consistent interpretation of quantum mechanics but do not offer a verdict on whether it should be preferred 46 In addition some agree with most but perhaps not all of the core tenets of QBism Barnum s position 47 as well as Appleby s 48 are examples Popularized or semi popularized media coverage of QBism has appeared in New Scientist 49 Scientific American 50 Nature 51 Science News 52 the FQXi Community 53 the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 29 Quanta Magazine 16 Aeon 54 Discover 55 Nautilus Quarterly 56 and Big Think 57 In 2018 two popular science books about the interpretation of quantum mechanics Ball s Beyond Weird and Ananthaswamy s Through Two Doors at Once devoted sections to QBism 58 59 Furthermore Harvard University Press published a popularized treatment of the subject QBism The Future of Quantum Physics in 2016 13 The philosophy literature has also discussed QBism from the viewpoints of structural realism and of phenomenology 60 61 62 Ballentine argues that the initial assumption of QBism is not valid because the inferential probability of Bayesian theory used by QBism is not applicable to quantum mechanics 63 Relation to other interpretations edit nbsp Group photo from the 2005 University of Konstanz conference Being Bayesian in a Quantum World Copenhagen interpretations edit The views of many physicists Bohr Heisenberg Rosenfeld von Weizsacker Peres etc are often grouped together as the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics Several authors have deprecated this terminology claiming that it is historically misleading and obscures differences between physicists that are as important as their similarities 14 64 QBism shares many characteristics in common with the ideas often labeled as the Copenhagen interpretation but the differences are important to conflate them or to regard QBism as a minor modification of the points of view of Bohr or Heisenberg for instance would be a substantial misrepresentation 10 31 QBism takes probabilities to be personal judgments of the individual agent who is using quantum mechanics This contrasts with older Copenhagen type views which hold that probabilities are given by quantum states that are in turn fixed by objective facts about preparation procedures 13 65 QBism considers a measurement to be any action that an agent takes to elicit a response from the world and the outcome of that measurement to be the experience the world s response induces back on that agent As a consequence communication between agents is the only means by which different agents can attempt to compare their internal experiences Most variants of the Copenhagen interpretation however hold that the outcomes of experiments are agent independent pieces of reality for anyone to access 10 QBism claims that these points on which it differs from previous Copenhagen type interpretations resolve the obscurities that many critics have found in the latter by changing the role that quantum theory plays even though QBism does not yet provide a specific underlying ontology Specifically QBism posits that quantum theory is a normative tool which an agent may use to better navigate reality rather than a set of mechanics governing it 22 42 Other epistemic interpretations edit Approaches to quantum theory like QBism 66 which treat quantum states as expressions of information knowledge belief or expectation are called epistemic interpretations 6 These approaches differ from each other in what they consider quantum states to be information or expectations about as well as in the technical features of the mathematics they employ Furthermore not all authors who advocate views of this type propose an answer to the question of what the information represented in quantum states concerns In the words of the paper that introduced the Spekkens Toy Model if a quantum state is a state of knowledge and it is not knowledge of local and noncontextual hidden variables then what is it knowledge about We do not at present have a good answer to this question We shall therefore remain completely agnostic about the nature of the reality to which the knowledge represented by quantum states pertains This is not to say that the question is not important Rather we see the epistemic approach as an unfinished project and this question as the central obstacle to its completion Nonetheless we argue that even in the absence of an answer to this question a case can be made for the epistemic view The key is that one can hope to identify phenomena that are characteristic of states of incomplete knowledge regardless of what this knowledge is about 67 Leifer and Spekkens propose a way of treating quantum probabilities as Bayesian probabilities thereby considering quantum states as epistemic which they state is closely aligned in its philosophical starting point with QBism 68 However they remain deliberately agnostic about what physical properties or entities quantum states are information or beliefs about as opposed to QBism which offers an answer to that question 68 Another approach advocated by Bub and Pitowsky argues that quantum states are information about propositions within event spaces that form non Boolean lattices 69 On occasion the proposals of Bub and Pitowsky are also called quantum Bayesianism 70 Zeilinger and Brukner have also proposed an interpretation of quantum mechanics in which information is a fundamental concept and in which quantum states are epistemic quantities 71 Unlike QBism the Brukner Zeilinger interpretation treats some probabilities as objectively fixed In the Brukner Zeilinger interpretation a quantum state represents the information that a hypothetical observer in possession of all possible data would have Put another way a quantum state belongs in their interpretation to an optimally informed agent whereas in QBism any agent can formulate a state to encode her own expectations 72 Despite this difference in Cabello s classification the proposals of Zeilinger and Brukner are also designated as participatory realism as QBism and the Copenhagen type interpretations are 6 Bayesian or epistemic interpretations of quantum probabilities were proposed in the early 1990s by Baez and Youssef 73 74 Von Neumann s views edit R F Streater argued that t he first quantum Bayesian was von Neumann basing that claim on von Neumann s textbook The Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics 75 Blake Stacey disagrees arguing that the views expressed in that book on the nature of quantum states and the interpretation of probability are not compatible with QBism or indeed with any position that might be called quantum Bayesianism 14 Relational quantum mechanics edit Comparisons have also been made between QBism and the relational quantum mechanics RQM espoused by Carlo Rovelli and others 76 77 In both QBism and RQM quantum states are not intrinsic properties of physical systems 78 Both QBism and RQM deny the existence of an absolute universal wavefunction Furthermore both QBism and RQM insist that quantum mechanics is a fundamentally local theory 23 79 In addition Rovelli like several QBist authors advocates reconstructing quantum theory from physical principles in order to bring clarity to the subject of quantum foundations 80 The QBist approaches to doing so are different from Rovelli s and are described below One important distinction between the two interpretations is their philosophy of probability RQM does not adopt the Ramsey de Finetti school of personalist Bayesianism 6 17 Moreover RQM does not insist that a measurement outcome is necessarily an agent s experience 17 Other uses of Bayesian probability in quantum physics edit QBism should be distinguished from other applications of Bayesian inference in quantum physics and from quantum analogues of Bayesian inference 19 73 For example some in the field of computer science have introduced a kind of quantum Bayesian network which they argue could have applications in medical diagnosis monitoring of processes and genetics 81 82 Bayesian inference has also been applied in quantum theory for updating probability densities over quantum states 83 and MaxEnt methods have been used in similar ways 73 84 Bayesian methods for quantum state and process tomography are an active area of research 85 Technical developments and reconstructing quantum theory editConceptual concerns about the interpretation of quantum mechanics and the meaning of probability have motivated technical work A quantum version of the de Finetti theorem introduced by Caves Fuchs and Schack independently reproving a result found using different means by Stormer 86 to provide a Bayesian understanding of the idea of an unknown quantum state 87 88 has found application elsewhere in topics like quantum key distribution 89 and entanglement detection 90 Adherents of several interpretations of quantum mechanics QBism included have been motivated to reconstruct quantum theory The goal of these research efforts has been to identify a new set of axioms or postulates from which the mathematical structure of quantum theory can be derived in the hope that with such a reformulation the features of nature which made quantum theory the way it is might be more easily identified 51 91 Although the core tenets of QBism do not demand such a reconstruction some QBists Fuchs 26 in particular have argued that the task should be pursued One topic prominent in the reconstruction effort is the set of mathematical structures known as symmetric informationally complete positive operator valued measures SIC POVMs QBist foundational research stimulated interest in these structures which now have applications in quantum theory outside of foundational studies 92 and in pure mathematics 93 The most extensively explored QBist reformulation of quantum theory involves the use of SIC POVMs to rewrite quantum states either pure or mixed as a set of probabilities defined over the outcomes of a Bureau of Standards measurement 94 95 That is if one expresses a density matrix as a probability distribution over the outcomes of a SIC POVM experiment one can reproduce all the statistical predictions implied by the density matrix from the SIC POVM probabilities instead 96 The Born rule then takes the role of relating one valid probability distribution to another rather than of deriving probabilities from something apparently more fundamental Fuchs Schack and others have taken to calling this restatement of the Born rule the urgleichung from the German for primal equation see Ur prefix because of the central role it plays in their reconstruction of quantum theory 19 97 98 The following discussion presumes some familiarity with the mathematics of quantum information theory and in particular the modeling of measurement procedures by POVMs Consider a quantum system to which is associated a d textstyle d nbsp dimensional Hilbert space If a set of d 2 textstyle d 2 nbsp rank 1 projectors P i displaystyle hat Pi i nbsp satisfyingtr P i P j d d i j 1 d 1 displaystyle operatorname tr hat Pi i hat Pi j frac d delta ij 1 d 1 nbsp exists then one may form a SIC POVM H i 1 d P i textstyle hat H i frac 1 d hat Pi i nbsp An arbitrary quantum state r displaystyle hat rho nbsp may be written as a linear combination of the SIC projectorsr i 1 d 2 d 1 P H i 1 d P i displaystyle hat rho sum i 1 d 2 left d 1 P H i frac 1 d right hat Pi i nbsp where P H i tr r H i textstyle P H i operatorname tr hat rho hat H i nbsp is the Born rule probability for obtaining SIC measurement outcome H i displaystyle H i nbsp implied by the state assignment r displaystyle hat rho nbsp We follow the convention that operators have hats while experiences that is measurement outcomes do not Now consider an arbitrary quantum measurement denoted by the POVM D j displaystyle hat D j nbsp The urgleichung is the expression obtained from forming the Born rule probabilities Q D j tr r D j textstyle Q D j operatorname tr hat rho hat D j nbsp for the outcomes of this quantum measurement Q D j i 1 d 2 d 1 P H i 1 d P D j H i displaystyle Q D j sum i 1 d 2 left d 1 P H i frac 1 d right P D j mid H i nbsp where P D j H i tr P i D j displaystyle P D j mid H i equiv operatorname tr hat Pi i hat D j nbsp is the Born rule probability for obtaining outcome D j displaystyle D j nbsp implied by the state assignment P i displaystyle hat Pi i nbsp The P D j H i displaystyle P D j mid H i nbsp term may be understood to be a conditional probability in a cascaded measurement scenario Imagine that an agent plans to perform two measurements first a SIC measurement and then the D j displaystyle D j nbsp measurement After obtaining an outcome from the SIC measurement the agent will update her state assignment to a new quantum state r displaystyle hat rho nbsp before performing the second measurement If she uses the Luders rule 99 for state update and obtains outcome H i displaystyle H i nbsp from the SIC measurement then r P i textstyle hat rho hat Pi i nbsp Thus the probability for obtaining outcome D j displaystyle D j nbsp for the second measurement conditioned on obtaining outcome H i displaystyle H i nbsp for the SIC measurement is P D j H i displaystyle P D j mid H i nbsp Note that the urgleichung is structurally very similar to the law of total probability which is the expressionP D j i 1 d 2 P H i P D j H i displaystyle P D j sum i 1 d 2 P H i P D j mid H i nbsp They functionally differ only by a dimension dependent affine transformation of the SIC probability vector As QBism says that quantum theory is an empirically motivated normative addition to probability theory Fuchs and others find the appearance of a structure in quantum theory analogous to one in probability theory to be an indication that a reformulation featuring the urgleichung prominently may help to reveal the properties of nature which made quantum theory so successful 19 22 It is important to recognize that the urgleichung does not replace the law of total probability Rather the urgleichung and the law of total probability apply in different scenarios because P D j displaystyle P D j nbsp and Q D j displaystyle Q D j nbsp refer to different situations P D j displaystyle P D j nbsp is the probability that an agent assigns for obtaining outcome D j displaystyle D j nbsp on her second of two planned measurements that is for obtaining outcome D j displaystyle D j nbsp after first making the SIC measurement and obtaining one of the H i displaystyle H i nbsp outcomes Q D j displaystyle Q D j nbsp on the other hand is the probability an agent assigns for obtaining outcome D j displaystyle D j nbsp when she does not plan to first make the SIC measurement The law of total probability is a consequence of coherence within the operational context of performing the two measurements as described The urgleichung in contrast is a relation between different contexts which finds its justification in the predictive success of quantum physics The SIC representation of quantum states also provides a reformulation of quantum dynamics Consider a quantum state r displaystyle hat rho nbsp with SIC representation P H i textstyle P H i nbsp The time evolution of this state is found by applying a unitary operator U displaystyle hat U nbsp to form the new state U r U textstyle hat U hat rho hat U dagger nbsp which has the SIC representationP t H i tr U r U H i tr r U H i U displaystyle P t H i operatorname tr left hat U hat rho hat U dagger hat H i right operatorname tr left hat rho hat U dagger hat H i hat U right nbsp The second equality is written in the Heisenberg picture of quantum dynamics with respect to which the time evolution of a quantum system is captured by the probabilities associated with a rotated SIC measurement D j U H j U textstyle D j hat U dagger hat H j hat U nbsp of the original quantum state r displaystyle hat rho nbsp Then the Schrodinger equation is completely captured in the urgleichung for this measurement P t H j i 1 d 2 d 1 P H i 1 d P D j H i displaystyle P t H j sum i 1 d 2 left d 1 P H i frac 1 d right P D j mid H i nbsp In these terms the Schrodinger equation is an instance of the Born rule applied to the passing of time an agent uses it to relate how she will gamble on informationally complete measurements potentially performed at different times Those QBists who find this approach promising are pursuing a complete reconstruction of quantum theory featuring the urgleichung as the key postulate 97 The urgleichung has also been discussed in the context of category theory 100 Comparisons between this approach and others not associated with QBism or indeed with any particular interpretation can be found in a book chapter by Fuchs and Stacey 101 and an article by Appleby et al 97 As of 2017 alternative QBist reconstruction efforts are in the beginning stages 102 See also edit nbsp Physics portalBayes factor Bayesian inference Credible intervals Degree of belief Doxastic logic Philosophy of science Quantum logic Quantum probability Statistical inferenceReferences edit a b Timpson Christopher Gordon 2008 Quantum Bayesianism A study postscript Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 39 3 579 609 arXiv 0804 2047 Bibcode 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as Points in a Probability Simplex Associated to a SIC POVM Foundations of Physics 41 7 1200 1213 arXiv 1007 0715 Bibcode 2011FoPh 41 1200R doi 10 1007 s10701 011 9540 9 ISSN 0015 9018 S2CID 119102347 a b c Appleby Marcus Fuchs Christopher A Stacey Blake C Zhu Huangjun 2016 12 09 Introducing the Qplex A Novel Arena for Quantum Theory The European Physical Journal D 71 7 197 arXiv 1612 03234 Bibcode 2017EPJD 71 197A doi 10 1140 epjd e2017 80024 y S2CID 119240836 Slomczynski Wojciech Szymusiak Anna 2020 09 30 Morphophoric POVMs generalised qplexes and 2 designs Quantum 4 338 arXiv 1911 12456 Bibcode 2020Quant 4 338S doi 10 22331 q 2020 09 30 338 ISSN 2521 327X S2CID 221663304 Busch Paul Lahti Pekka 2009 01 01 Luders Rule In Greenberger Daniel Hentschel Klaus Weinert Friedel eds Compendium of Quantum Physics Springer Berlin Heidelberg pp 356 358 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 70626 7 110 ISBN 9783540706229 van de Wetering John 2018 Quantum theory is a quasi stochastic process theory Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 266 2018 179 196 arXiv 1704 08525 doi 10 4204 EPTCS 266 12 S2CID 53635011 Fuchs Christopher A Stacey Blake C 2016 01 01 Some Negative Remarks on Operational Approaches to Quantum Theory In Chiribella Giulio Spekkens Robert W eds Quantum Theory Informational Foundations and Foils Fundamental Theories of Physics Vol 181 Springer Netherlands pp 283 305 arXiv 1401 7254 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 7303 4 9 ISBN 9789401773027 S2CID 116428784 Chiribella Giulio Cabello Adan Kleinmann Matthias The Observer Observed a Bayesian Route to the Reconstruction of Quantum Theory FQXi Foundational Questions Institute Retrieved 2017 04 18 External links editExotic Probability Theories and Quantum Mechanics References Notes on a Paulian Idea Foundational Historical Anecdotal and Forward Looking Thoughts on the Quantum Cerro Grande Fire Series Volume 1 My Struggles with the Block Universe Cerro Grande Fire Series Volume 2 Why the multiverse is all about you The Philosopher s Zone interview with Fuchs A Private View of Quantum Reality Quanta Magazine interview with Fuchs Rudiger Schack on QBism in The Conversation Participatory Realism 2017 conference at the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study Being Bayesian in a Quantum World 2005 conference at the University of Konstanz Cabello Adan September 2017 El puzle de la teoria cuantica Es posible zanjar cientificamente el debate sobre la naturaleza del mundo cuantico Investigacion y Ciencia Fuchs Christopher presenter Stacey Blake editor Thisdell Bill editor 2018 04 25 Some Tenets of QBism YouTube Retrieved 2018 05 17 DeBrota John B Stacey Blake C 2018 10 31 FAQBism arXiv 1810 13401 quant ph Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quantum Bayesianism amp oldid 1184195176, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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