Relaxed Bell Inequalities with Arbitrary Measurement Dependence for Each Observer
Andrew S. Friedman, Alan H. Guth, Michael J. W. Hall, David I. Kaiser,, and Jason Gallicchio

TL;DR
This paper derives and analyzes relaxed Bell inequalities that allow for arbitrary measurement dependence per observer, quantifying how much measurement independence must be relaxed for local models to reproduce quantum violations.
Contribution
It introduces new tight Bell inequalities with multiple parameters that generalize previous models, reducing the required mutual information for reproducing violations.
Findings
Relaxed inequalities are tight bounds on the CHSH parameter.
New models require less mutual information than previous ones.
Relaxing measurement independence does not necessarily imply superdeterminism.
Abstract
Bell's inequality was originally derived under the assumption that experimenters are free to select detector settings independently of any local "hidden variables" that might affect the outcomes of measurements on entangled particles. This assumption has come to be known as "measurement independence" (also referred to as "freedom of choice" or "settings independence"). For a two-setting, two-outcome Bell test, we derive modified Bell inequalities that relax measurement independence, for either or both observers, while remaining locally causal. We describe the loss of measurement independence for each observer using the parameters and , as defined by Hall in 2010, and also by a more complete description that adds two new parameters, which we call and , deriving a modified Bell inequality for each description. These "relaxed" inequalities subsume those…
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