5
talks
1
posters
0
committee roles
0
leadership roles
2023–2026
years active
Contributions
QIP QCrypt TQC presenter award · △program ◇steering ○organising □local · filled = chair
Talks
| Title | Conference | Type | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Quantitative Quantum Soundness for Bipartite Compiled Bell Games via the Sequential NPA Hierarchy ↗
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QIP 2026 | regular | Xiangling Xu, Igor Klep, Connor Paddock, Marc-Olivier Renou, Lucas Tendick, Yuming Zhao |
Compiling Bell games under cryptographic assumptions replaces the need for physical separation, allowing nonlocality to be probed with a single untrusted device. While Kalai et al. (STOC'23) showed that this compilation preserves quantum advantages, its quantitative quantum soundness has remained an open problem. We address this gap with two primary contributions. First, we establish the first quantitative quantum soundness bounds for every bipartite compiled Bell game whose optimal quantum strategy is finite-dimensional: any polynomial-time prover's score in the compiled game is negligibly close to the game's ideal quantum value. More generally, for all bipartite games we show that the compiled score cannot significantly exceed the bounds given by a newly formalized convergent sequential Navascués-Pironio-Acín (NPA) hierarchy. Second, we provide a full characterization of this sequential NPA hierarchy, establishing it as a robust numerical tool that is of independent interest. Finally, for games without finite-dimensional optimal strategies, we explore the necessity of NPA approximation error for quantitatively bounding their compiled scores, linking these considerations to the complexity conjecture $\mathrm{MIP}^{\mathrm{co}}=\mathrm{coRE}$ and open challenges such as quantum homomorphic encryption correctness for "weakly commuting" quantum registers. |
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| A Bound on the Quantum Value of All Compiled Nonlocal Games | QIP 2025 | plenary_short ▸ presenter | Alexander Kulpe, Giulio Malavolta, Connor Paddock, Michael Walter |
| A mathematical foundation for self-testing: Lifting common assumptions | QIP 2024 | regular | ▸Pedro Baptista, Ranyiliu Chen, Jędrzej Kaniewski, David Rasmussen Lolck, Laura Mančinska, Thor Gabelgaard Nielsen |
|
A Computational Tsirelson's Theorem for the Value of Compiled XOR Games ↗
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TQC 2024 | regular | ▸David Cui, Giulio Malavolta, Arthur Mehta, Anand Natarajan, Connor Paddock, Michael Walter, Tina Zhang |
Nonlocal games are a foundational tool for understanding entanglement and constructing quantum protocols in settings with multiple spatially separated quantum devices. In this work, we continue the study initiated by Kalai et al. (STOC '23) of compiled nonlocal games, played between a classical verifier and a single cryptographically limited quantum device. Our main result is that the compiler proposed by Kalai et al. is sound for any two-player XOR game. A celebrated theorem of Tsirelson shows that for XOR games, the quantum value is exactly given by a semidefinite program, and we obtain our result by showing that the SDP upper bound holds for the compiled game up to a negligible error arising from the compilation. This answers a question raised by Natarajan and Zhang (FOCS '23), who showed soundness for the specific case of the CHSH game. Using our techniques, we obtain several additional results, including (1) tight bounds on the compiled value of parallel-repeated XOR games, (2) operator self-testing statements for any compiled XOR game, and (3) a ``nice" sum-of-squares certificate for any XOR game, from which operator rigidity is manifest. |
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| The power and limitations of self-testing | TQC 2023 | regular | ▸David Rasmussen Lolck, Laura Mančinska, Thor Nielsen, Jed Kaniewski |
Self-testing results allow us to characterize measurements and states in a quantum device from classical output probabilities in a nonlocal game. However, there is some variation in how the individual self- testing statements are stated and proven, including whether they apply robustly or assume purity of the state or protectiveness of the measurements. We investigate these differences, and as one of our main results show that if the reference strategy of a given game has full Schmidt rank, the notions of self-testing strategies using either mixed or pure states coincide. Additionally, we show by example that not all types of self-testing statements are equivalent: We both provide an example of a nonlocal game which is an exact, but not a robust, self-test, and an example of another game which does not self-test any state. |
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Posters
| Title | Conference | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|
| Compiled Nonlocal Games from any Trapdoor Claw-Free Function | QIP 2025 | Kaniuar Bacho, Alexander Kulpe, Giulio Malavolta, Michael Walter |
Collaborators
| Co-author | Joint talks |
|---|---|
| Connor Paddock | 3 |
| Giulio Malavolta | 3 |
| Michael Walter | 3 |
| Alexander Kulpe | 2 |
| David Rasmussen Lolck | 2 |
| Laura Mančinska | 2 |
| Anand Natarajan | 1 |
| Arthur Mehta | 1 |
| David Cui | 1 |
| Igor Klep | 1 |
| Jed Kaniewski | 1 |
| Jędrzej Kaniewski | 1 |
| Kaniuar Bacho | 1 |
| Lucas Tendick | 1 |
| Marc-Olivier Renou | 1 |
| Pedro Baptista | 1 |
| Ranyiliu Chen | 1 |
| Thor Gabelgaard Nielsen | 1 |
| Thor Nielsen | 1 |
| Tina Zhang | 1 |