Information-Computation Gaps in Quantum Learning via Low-Degree Likelihood
Sitan Chen, Weiyuan Gong, Jonas Haferkamp, Yihui Quek

TL;DR
This paper extends classical low-degree methods to quantum settings, establishing new information-computation gaps in quantum learning tasks such as Gibbs states, shallow circuits, and error mitigation, revealing fundamental hardness boundaries.
Contribution
It introduces a quantum low-degree framework, connecting state designs to hardness, and demonstrates novel quantum learning hardness results, including for adaptive measurements and quantum error mitigation.
Findings
First quantum low-degree hardness results for Gibbs state learning
Hardness established for shallow quantum circuit states with adaptive measurements
Quantum error mitigation hardness against single-qubit measurement strategies
Abstract
In a variety of physically relevant settings for learning from quantum data, designing protocols that can computationally efficiently extract information remains largely an art, and there are important cases where we believe this to be impossible, that is, where there is an information-computation gap. While there is a large array of tools in the classical literature for giving evidence for average-case hardness of statistical inference problems, the corresponding tools in the quantum literature are far more limited. One such framework in the classical literature, the low-degree method, makes predictions about hardness of inference problems based on the failure of estimators given by low-degree polynomials. In this work, we extend this framework to the quantum setting. We establish a general connection between state designs and low-degree hardness. We use this to obtain the first…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum many-body systems
