2
talks
1
posters
0
committee roles
0
leadership roles
2025–2026
years active
Contributions
QIP QCrypt TQC presenter award · △program ◇steering ○organising □local · filled = chair
Talks
| Title | Conference | Type | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Computational relative entropy | QIP 2026 | regular | Johannes Jakob Meyer, Jacopo Rizzo, Lorenzo Leone, Sofiene Jerbi, Jens Eisert |
Our capacity to process information depends on the computational power at our disposal. Information theory captures our ability to distinguish states or communicate messages when it is unconstrained with unrivaled beauty and elegance. For computationally bounded observers the situation is quite different -- they can, for example, be fooled to believe that distributions are more random than they actually are. Existing mathematical approaches in computational information theory largely follow the single-shot paradigm that, while being operationally meaningful, also gives complicated statements and is difficult to build intuition for. In our work, we take a new direction in computational quantum information theory that captures the essence of complexity-constrained information theory while retaining the look and feel of the unbounded asymptotic theory. As our foundational quantity, we define the computational relative entropy as the optimal error exponent in asymmetric hypothesis testing when restricted to polynomially many copies and quantum gates, defined in a mathematically rigorous way. Building on this foundation, we prove a computational analogue of Stein's lemma, establish computational versions of fundamental inequalities like Pinsker's bound, and demonstrate a computational smoothing property showing that computationally indistinguishable states yield equivalent information measures. We derive a computational entropy that operationally characterizes optimal compression rates for quantum states under computational limitations and show that our quantities apply to computational entanglement theory, proving a computational version of the Rains bound. Our framework reveals striking separations between computational and unbounded information measures, including quantum-classical gaps that arise from cryptographic assumptions, demonstrating that computational constraints fundamentally alter the information-theoretic landscape and open new research directions at the intersection of quantum information, complexity theory, and cryptography. |
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| Online learning of quantum processes | TQC 2025 | regular | Matthias C. Caro, Jens Eisert, Sumeet Khatri |
Posters
| Title | Conference | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|
| Online learning of quantum processes | QIP 2025 | Matthias C. Caro, Jens Eisert, Sumeet Khatri |
Collaborators
| Co-author | Joint talks |
|---|---|
| Jens Eisert | 3 |
| Matthias C. Caro | 2 |
| Sumeet Khatri | 2 |
| Jacopo Rizzo | 1 |
| Johannes Jakob Meyer | 1 |
| Lorenzo Leone | 1 |
| Sofiene Jerbi | 1 |