Hardness amplification for entangled games via anchoring
- Creators
- Bavarian, Mohammad
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Vidick, Thomas
- Yuen, Henry
Abstract
We study the parallel repetition of one-round games involving players that can use quantum entanglement. A major open question in this area is whether parallel repetition reduces the entangled value of a game at an exponential rate - in other words, does an analogue of Raz's parallel repetition theorem hold for games with players sharing quantum entanglement? Previous results only apply to special classes of games. We introduce a class of games we call anchored. We then introduce a simple transformation on games called anchoring, inspired in part by the Feige-Kilian transformation, that turns any (multiplayer) game into an anchored game. Unlike the Feige-Kilian transformation, our anchoring transformation is completeness preserving. We prove an exponential-decay parallel repetition theorem for anchored games that involve any number of entangled players. We also prove a threshold version of our parallel repetition theorem for anchored games. Together, our parallel repetition theorems and anchoring transformation provide the first hardness amplification techniques for general entangled games. We give an application to the games version of the Quantum PCP Conjecture.
Additional Information
© 2017 ACM. We thank Mark Braverman and Ankit Garg for useful discussions. MB was supported by NSF under CCF-0939370 and CCF-1420956. TV was supported by NSF CAREER Grant CCF-1553477, AFOSR YIP award number FA9550-16-1-0495, and the IQIM, an NSF Physics Frontiers Center (NFS Grant PHY-1125565) with support of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (GBMF-12500028). HY was supported by Simons Foundation grant #360893, and National Science Foundation Grants 1122374 and 1218547.Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 78913
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20170710-152910604
- NSF
- CCF-0939370
- NSF
- CCF-1420956
- NSF
- CCF-1553477
- Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR)
- FA9550-16-1-0495
- NSF
- PHY-1125565
- Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
- GBMF-12500028
- Simons Foundation
- 360893
- NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
- DGE-1122374
- NSF
- 1218547
- Created
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2017-07-10Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-15Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- Institute for Quantum Information and Matter