Quantum information in the Posner model of quantum cognition
Nicole Yunger Halpern, Elizabeth Crosson

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of Posner molecules as biological qubits, proposing a framework for quantum information processing, error correction, and communication in the context of quantum cognition and biology.
Contribution
It introduces a novel quantum computation model based on Posner molecules, including error correction codes and quantum communication protocols, advancing the understanding of biological quantum information.
Findings
Posner molecules can encode qubits and qutrits with a natural basis.
A quantum error correction code for single-qubit errors is constructed.
Posner states can serve as resources for measurement-based quantum computation.
Abstract
Matthew Fisher recently postulated a mechanism by which quantum phenomena could influence cognition: Phosphorus nuclear spins may resist decoherence for long times, especially when in Posner molecules. The spins would serve as biological qubits. We imagine that Fisher postulates correctly. How adroitly could biological systems process quantum information (QI)? We establish a framework for answering. Additionally, we construct applications of biological qubits to quantum error correction, quantum communication, and quantum computation. First, we posit how the QI encoded by the spins transforms as Posner molecules form. The transformation points to a natural computational basis for qubits in Posner molecules. From the basis, we construct a quantum code that detects arbitrary single-qubit errors. Each molecule encodes one qutrit. Shifting from information storage to computation, we define…
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