No-Signalling Is Equivalent To Free Choice of Measurements
Samson Abramsky (University of Oxford), Adam Brandenburger (New York, University), Andrei Savochkin (New Economic School, Moscow)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the No-Signalling condition in quantum mechanics is mathematically equivalent to the assumption of free choice of measurements, linking it to hidden-variable theories with signed probabilities.
Contribution
It establishes an equivalence between No-Signalling and Lambda Independence, showing that No-Signalling can be understood through hidden-variable models with negative probabilities.
Findings
No-Signalling is equivalent to free choice of measurements.
Hidden-variable models with signed probabilities can reproduce No-Signalling behaviors.
The result connects quantum non-locality constraints with measurement independence assumptions.
Abstract
No-Signalling is a fundamental constraint on the probabilistic predictions made by physical theories. It is usually justified in terms of the constraints imposed by special relativity. However, this justification is not as clear-cut as is usually supposed. We shall give a different perspective on this condition by showing an equivalence between No-Signalling and Lambda Independence, or "free choice of measurements", a condition on hidden-variable theories which is needed to make no-go theorems such as Bell's theorem non-trivial. More precisely, we shall show that a probability table describing measurement outcomes is No-Signalling if and only if it can be realized by a Lambda-Independent hidden-variable theory of a particular canonical form, in which the hidden variables correspond to non-contextual deterministic predictions of measurement outcomes. The key proviso which avoids…
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