Co-Designing Error Mitigation and Error Detection for Logical Qubits
Rohan S. Kumar, Takahiro Tsunoda, Sophia H. Xue, Dantong Li, Robert J. Schoelkopf, Yongshan Ding

TL;DR
This paper explores the joint design of Quantum Error Detection and Probabilistic Error Cancellation to optimize error management in near-term quantum workloads, addressing cost and accuracy tradeoffs.
Contribution
It introduces a co-designed approach, including an optimized QED interval and steady-state error characterization, to improve error mitigation effectiveness.
Findings
Optimized QED intervals outperform canonical one-cycle-per-gate frequency.
Naive PEC+QED integration degrades accuracy due to transient error profiles.
Steady-state extraction reduces estimation bias, enhancing error mitigation performance.
Abstract
Near-term quantum workloads demand error management, yet the two lightest-weight techniques, Quantum Error Detection (QED) and Probabilistic Error Cancellation (PEC), have complementary cost profiles whose joint architectural design space remains unexplored. QED encodes logical qubits and discards error-flagged runs, filtering noise with low qubit overhead but leaving residual errors; PEC can correct these in software, but at exponential cost in noise strength. If QED efficiently reduces per-gate noise, PEC's cost savings can outweigh QED's discard overhead; realizing this, however, requires solving two system-level design challenges. First, the \textit{QED interval} -- how often detection cycles are inserted -- is a tunable architectural parameter governing the cost-accuracy tradeoff. We derive an efficiency condition and show that the canonical one-cycle-per-gate frequency does not…
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