Shared Randomness and Quantum Communication in the Multi-Party Model
Dmitry Gavinsky, Tsuyoshi Ito, Guoming Wang

TL;DR
This paper explores the unique properties of shared randomness in multi-party quantum communication, revealing hierarchies, exponential separations, and limitations of quantum protocols in replacing shared randomness.
Contribution
It introduces a hierarchy of shared randomness modes, proves exponential separations, and demonstrates quantum communication cannot fully replace shared randomness in multi-party settings.
Findings
Hierarchy of shared randomness modes with exponential separations
Equality function solvable with XOR-shared randomness in constant length
Quantum communication cannot replace shared randomness in multi-party protocols
Abstract
We study shared randomness in the context of multi-party number-in-hand communication protocols in the simultaneous message passing model. We show that with three or more players, shared randomness exhibits new interesting properties that have no direct analogues in the two-party case. First, we demonstrate a hierarchy of modes of shared randomness, with the usual shared randomness where all parties access the same random string as the strongest form in the hierarchy. We show exponential separations between its levels, and some of our bounds may be of independent interest. For example, we show that the equality function can be solved by a protocol of constant length using the weakest form of shared randomness, which we call "XOR-shared randomness." Second, we show that quantum communication cannot replace shared randomness in the k-party case, where k >= 3 is any constant. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography
