Quantum correlations in QBism's reconstruction program
Abstract
QBism recasts quantum theory as a normative framework for an agent's probability assignments, with the Born rule taking the form of a consistency condition known as the Urgleichung. Motivated by this perspective, qplex theories provide a broader class of probabilistic models in which the sets of valid states and measurements are constrained by QBist-inspired geometric conditions. While qplexes have been extensively studied for single systems, their implications for bipartite correlations remain ...
Description / Details
QBism recasts quantum theory as a normative framework for an agent's probability assignments, with the Born rule taking the form of a consistency condition known as the Urgleichung. Motivated by this perspective, qplex theories provide a broader class of probabilistic models in which the sets of valid states and measurements are constrained by QBist-inspired geometric conditions. While qplexes have been extensively studied for single systems, their implications for bipartite correlations remain largely unexplored. In this work, we investigate bipartite correlations in qplex theories by expressing joint expectation values as inner products between suitably defined -vectors. This geometric formulation allows Bell-type inequalities to be studied as optimization problems over qplex-compatible probability assignments. We first analyze the CHSH scenario and show that the shared inner-product structure of the -vectors restricts the maximal value to the Tsirelson bound . We then turn to the three-outcome CGLMP inequality and find that the same qplex-derived norm and inner-product constraints allow the algebraic maximum of 4, thereby exhibiting superquantum correlations. These results show that qplex geometry captures enough structure to reproduce an important quantum bound in the two-outcome case, but not enough to recover the full set of quantum correlation constraints. The analysis therefore suggests that additional principles are needed to complete the QBist reconstruction of quantum theory.
Source: arXiv:2606.07485v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.07485v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2606.07485v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.07485v1
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Jun 8, 2026
Quantum Computing
Quantum Physics
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