Quantum Information and Probability: from Foundations to Engineering (QIP22)
An international conference devoted to quantum foundations, especially information and probability, including foundational questions of quantum engineering, at Linnaeus University in Växjö. The conference is supported by The Mathemathical Institute at Linnaeus University.
The conference will be based on the talks of invited speakers (30 min + 5 min questions) and contributed talks (20 min + 5 min questions). For contributed talks, the acceptance decision will be done based on the abstract, so please start with registration (without paying the fee) and abstract submission. After the positive reply, one goes back to the registration form and pays the org. fee.
For graduate and postgraduate students, a poster-presentation is preferable, because a poster would get higher visibility than a talk in one of a few parallel sessions. The journal Entropy supports the awards for the two best posters with 350 and 150 Swiss francs respectively.
The conference is arranged by International Centre for Mathematical Modelling in physics, engineering and cognitive sciences (ICMM). Quantum information revolution has big foundational impact. We invite all kinds of contributions devoted to quantum foundations, especially (but not exclusively) with coupling to quantum information, probability, and measurement theory.
Contact information
If you have any questions or inquiries about the conference, pleas e-mail quantumfoundations@lnu.se
Invited speakers
Poster with invited speakers to download (pdf)
- L. Accardi (University of Rome, Tor Vergata, Italy)
- P. Arve (Solna, Sweden)
- D. Arvidsson Shukur (Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory, UK)
- C. Baladron (University of Valladolid, Spain)
- I. Bengtsson (Stockholm University, Sweden)
- F. Buscemi (Nagoya University, Japan)
- A.M. Cetto (UNAM, Mexico)
- M. G. D'Ariano (University of Pavia, Italy)
- L. Diósi (Wigner Research Centre for Physics, Hungary)
- F. Fagnola (Polytechnic University of Milan, Italy)
- C. Gallus (Technische Hochschule Mittelhessen (THM), Germany)
- M. Genovese (INRIM, Italy)
- P. Grangier (The National Center for Scientific Research, France)
- H. Hofmann (Hiroshima University, Japan)
- F. Holik (National Scientific and Technical Research Council, Argentina)
- G. Jaeger (Boston University, USA)
- J-Å. Larsson (Linköping University, Sweden)
- G. Mardari (Rutgers University, USA)
- T. M. Nieuwenhuizen (University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands)
- M. Ozawa (Nagoya University, Japan)
- F. Piacentini (Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica, Italy)
- J. Pienaar (University of Massachusetts Boston, USA)
- P. Perinotti (University of Pavia, Italy)
- A. Plotnitsky (Purdue University, USA)
- S. Polyakov (NIST, USA)
- R. Renner (ETH Zurich, Switzerland
- K. Svozil (TU Wien, Austria)
- I. Trofimova (McMaster University, Canada)
- L. Vaidman (Tel Aviv University, Israel)
- N. Watanabe (Tokyo University of Science, Japan)
- G. Weihs (University of Innsbruck, Austria
Programme and Abstract
Programme of the Conference QIP22
Posters’ exhibition is open during the whole duration of the Workshop
Main conference auditorium: Myrdal, main building H, campus of Linnaeus University, Växjö
Tuesday, 14 June 2022
08.20-09.00 Registration (outside the main conference room Myrdal)
09.00-09.10 Opening ceremony
09.10-09.40 Gregg Jaeger: What Elementary Particles Are
09.45-10.15 Ana Maria Cetto: A geometric model for the singlet electron spin correlation
10.20-10.40 Coffe break
10.40-11.10 Gregor Weihs: Multiparticle Quantum Interferometry
11.15-11.45 Holger Hofmann: Interactions are physical: An explanation of the relation between different measurements and their outcomes
11.50-12.20 Arkady Plotnitsky: It is Not Time: Mathematics, Measurement, and Temporality in Quantum Physics and Physics in General
12.30-13.30 Lunch
13.30-14.00 Philippe Grangier: Revisiting Quantum Contextuality
14.05-14.35 Karl Svozil: Extending Kolmogorov's axioms for a generalized probability theory on collections of contexts
14.40-15.10 Jan-Åke Larsson: Conjugate logic and an efficient contextual ontological model of n-qubit stabilizer quantum mechanics
15.10-15.20 Break
15.20-15.50 Frederico Holik: Contextuality and non-Kolmogorovian probabilities
15.50-16.20 Christoph Gallus: Bell’s approach in macro- and microscopic systems
16.20-16.50 Ghenadie Mardari: Is quantum theory falsified by loophole-free Bell experiments?
16.50-17.10 Coffee Break
17.10-19.15 Parallel sessions (room K1050 and K1051)
Room K1050
17.10-17.30 Daniel McNulty: Estimating Quantum Hamiltonians via Joint Measurements of Noisy Non-Commuting Observables
17.35-17.55 Shintaro Minagawa: von Neumann’s information engine without the spectral theorem
18.05-18.25 Joppe Widstam: Self-Locating Uncertainty in Bayesian Epistemology and the Many-Worlds Interpretation
18.30-18.50 Cihan Okay: Simplicial quantum contextuality
18.55-19.15 M. Hamed Mohammady: Thermodynamically free quantum measurements
Room K1051
17.10-17.30 Oded Shor: TBA
17.35-17.55 Martin Bures: On the Bures metric and state space stratification for qudit systems
18.05-18.25 Robert Jonsson: Entanglement duality in free supersymmetric systems
18.30-18.50 Seyed Arash Ghoreishi: Minimum-error discrimination for qubit states revisited
18.55-19.15 Joseph G. Smith: An iterative quantum-phase-estimation protocol for near- term intermediate-scale quantum hardware
Wednesday, 15 June 2022
09.00-09.30 Lev Vaidman: Rabit: a random bit in deterministic quantum world
09.35-10.05 Marco Genovese: On the emergence of Irreversibility in Quantum Systems
10.10-10.30 Coffee Break
10.30-11.00 Giacomo Mauro D' Ariano: Quantum Epistemology and Falsification
11.05-11.35 Francesco Buscemi: Fluctuation Relations (and The Second Law of Thermodynamics) as Bayesian Retrodiction
11.40-12.10 Per Arve: Bohm Mechanics and other Ensemble Interpretations aren’t Viable
12.15-13.45 Lunch
13.45-14.15 Paolo Perinotti: On the Heisenberg thought experiment and notions of compatibility
14.15-14.45 Carlos Baladron: Development of a microscopic model for elementary consciousness in an information-theoretic Darwinian approach to quantum mechanics
14.45-15.15 Irina Trofimova: Struggling with compatibility between mathematical and natural functions
15.15-15.35 Coffee Break
15.35-15.55 Russell Thompson: A Quantum-Classical Isomorphic Interpretation of Quantum Foundations
16.00-16.20 William Sulis: The Classical-Quantum Dichotomy from the Perspective of the Process Algebra
16.25-16.45 Andrey Akhmeteli: Plasma-like description for quantum particles
16.50-17.10 Alessio Benavoli: Why is finite exchangeability in classical probability as weird as quantum mechanics? How does classical reality emerge for identical bosons?
17.15-17.25 Break
17.30-19.15 Parallel sessions (room K1050 and K1051)
K1050
17.30-17.50 Pieter Kruit: Quantum jumps without collapse may lead to a new
interpretation of quantum mechanics
17.55-18.15 Fabrizio Napolitano: Experimental tests of Quantum Mechanics: from collapse models to the Pauli Exclusion Principle
18.20-18.40 Gilberto Cunha: Quantum online planning for POMDPs with Bayesian Networks
18.45-19.05 Jasper van Wezel: Objective collapse theories: minimal requirements and a minimal example
K1051
17.30-17.50 Michael Westmoreland: Interpretation of quantum Theory: the quantum "gruebleen" problem
17.55-18.15 Flavio Salvati: Post-selected quantum metrology in noisy settings
18.20-18.40 Lorenzo Catani: Why interference phenomena do not capture the essence of quantum theory
18.45-19.05 David Davalos: Quantum dynamics is not strictly bidivisible
Thursday, 16 June 2022
09.00-09.30 Renato Renner: Quantum Foundations in the Light of Gravity
09.35-10.05 Ingemar Bengtsson: The velocity of light and all that
10.10-10.30 Coffee Break
10.30-11.00 Sergey Polyakov: The velocity of light and all that
11.05-11.35 Masanao Ozawa: Quantum Disturbance without State Change
11.40-12.10 Noboru Watanabe: On Transmitted Complexity for Modified Compound States
12.15-13.30 Lunch
13.30-14.00 Lajos Diosi: The case of Quantum Gravity with Spontaneous Collapse
14.05-14.35 Fabrizio Piacentini: Pseudo-density operators: from chronology-violating regions modeling to quantum dynamics via temporal teleportation
14.40-15.10 David Arvidsson-Shukur: Anomalous and lossless compression of quantum information
15.15-15.20 Break
15.20-15.40 Stephan De Bievre: Optical nonclassicality, (de)coherence and entanglement for multi-mode optical states
15.45-16.05 Yves Caudando:Geometric phases in weak measurements of discrete quantum system
16.10-16.30 Yau Hou: Fluctuations of a Particle's Arrival Time
16.35-17.30 Coffee Break and Poster session
18.00-22.00 Conference dinner at Teleborg Castle
Friday, 17 June 2022
09.00-09.20 Tatsu Takeuchi: Symmetries of Spekkens' Toy Model and its map to Spin-like states in F5 Quantum Mechanics
09.25-09.45 Kuntal Sengupta: Quantum Bell nonlocality as a form of entangleme
09.50-10.10 Tajchel-Mieldzioć Grzegorz: Algebraic and geometric structures inside the Birkhoff polytope
10.15-10.35 Jacques Pienaar: Artificial agents in QBism and the Born rule
10.40-11.00 Coffee Break
11.00-11.30 Andrei Khrennikov: Is the Devil in the Planck constant?
11.30-12.00 Luigi Accardi: A new challenge for classical and quantum probability
12.00-12.30 Franco Fagnola: Gaussian Quantum Markov Semigroups nt
12.30-13.00 Theo M Nieuwenhuizen: Exact solutions for black holes with a smooth quantum core
13.00-14.00 Lunch
14.00-14.20 Christopher Long: Faster, Shallower, more Accurate Method for Quantum Computational Chemistry
14.25-14.45 Kieran Dalton: High-performance density matrix simulator for testing VQE methods using iteratively-grown ansätze
15.10-15.30 Akshata Shenoy: Quantum Technologies for Satellite Based Quantum Communication
15.35-15.55 Hosapete Seshadri Karthik: Activating quantum random access codes with stochastic operations
16.00-16.25 Coffee Break
16.25-16.45 Donald Spector: How Much It from How Much Bit: Algorithmic Complexity as a Source of Symmetry Breaking
16.50-17.10 Kieran Flatt: Contextual advantages and certification for maximum confidence discrimination
17.15-17.35 Veronika Baumann: Consequences for probability assignments in Wigner’s friend experiment
17.40-18.00 Mohammed Alkhateeb: A paradox solved by a paradox: negative traversal times and Klein tunneling in relativistic quantum mechanics
18.05-18.15 Conference closing ceremony
Posters
John Small: Self-reference, circles and the Standard Model
Lotte Mertens: The inconsistency of linear dynamics and Born’s rule
Janeth Canama: Operator Lie Algebras of Rotations and Transformations in White Noise
Shashaank Khanna: Characterising which causal structures might not support a classical explanation based on any underlying physical theory
Stanislav Filatov: Unitarity of decoherence implies possibility of decoherence-like dynamics towards macroscopic superpositions
Jan Dziewior: Delayed Choice and Bohmian Trajectories Investigated with
Entangled Photons in a Double Slit
Lorena Ballesteros Ferraz: Geometrical interpretation of the argument of weak values of general observables in CPN and on the Bloch sphere
Eric Aspling: Bosonization and Unruh-DeWitt Detectors for Laboratory
Realized Quantum Electrical Engineering
Abstract Submission & Registration
Abstract submission and registration is now closed.
Conference Proceedings
Conference proceedings will be published as a part of the special issue Quantum Information and Probability: From Foundations to Engineering.
The guest editors in this issue are Francesco Buscemi and Andrei Khrennikov.
Conference media
Link to recorded Round Table session "Is quantum theory nonlocal?" (time: 59:47)
Committees
Organizing committee
- Mauro D’Ariano (University of Pavia, Italy)
- Frederiko Holik (National Scientific and Technical Research Council, Argentina)
- Gregg Jaeger (Boston University, USA)
- Theo Nieuwenhuizen (Amsterdam University, the Netherlands)
- Arkady Plotnitsky (Purdue Univiersity, USA)
Local organizing committee
- Fritiof Wallentin (Linnaeus University, Sweden)
E-mail: fritiof.persson@lnu.se
Accommodation
Please observe that each participant has to book accommodation by him-/herself. Special rates have been negotiated with hotels for participants of the conference.
Book your hotel only via e-mail or phone directly to the hotels (see below for addresses and phone numbers)!
Please also note that you need to quote the booking code "QIP22" when booking a room to obtain these rates (write it in the subject line of the e-mail).
P.S. As you can see there are two Elite Hotels in Växjö, so please remember which hotel you have booked!
1) Elite Park Hotel (Konserthuset)
Västra Esplanaden 10–14, Box 434, SE–351 06 Växjö, Sweden
Phone: +46 (0)470–70 22 00
Fax: +46 (0)470–475 77
E-mail: info.parkvaxjo@elite.se
Web: www.elite.se/en/hotels/vaxjo/park-hotel
2) Elite Stadshotellet Växjö
Kungsgatan 6, Box 198, SE–351 04 Växjö, Sweden
Phone: +46 (0)470–134 00
Fax: +46 (0)470–448 37
E-mail: info.vaxjo@elite.se
Web: www.elite.se/en/hotels/vaxjo/stadshotellet
3) Teleborgs slott
Adress: Slottsallén 12, SE-351 12, Växjö (on campus!)
Phone: +46 (0)470–77 86 60
E-mail: info@teleborgsslott.com
Web: www.teleborgsslott.com (in Swedish)
Other possibilities (for cheaper accomodation; no special rates):
- Växjö vandrarhem Evedal, www.vaxjovandrarhem.nu (far from the university, but great place: forests and lake; good bus connection)
- Skäraton korttidsboende, Välluddevägen 1, 352 51 Växjö. Phone: +46 (0)70–378 00 95, e-mail: skaraton@skaraton.com (near the university; cheap student type accomodation)
- Damsö B & B, www.damso.se (relatively cheap and not far from the university; in Swedish)
-
Easy Livin´ (apartment hotel) (Use the code LNU15 för 15% reduction)
Fredrik Bondes väg 29
SE-352 56 VÄXJÖ
You can book by email: easylivin@stubor.se
Or call +46 (0)768- 95 87 37
Web: https://www.easylivinhotel.se/en