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quantum machine learning |
Investigating Non-classical Correlations |
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2 Related Work
A composite system being entangled cannot be validly decomposed and modeled as separate subsystems. The quantum theory provides formal tools to model interacting systems as non-decomposable in macroscopic world as well. The phenomenon of quantum entanglement has been investigated in semantic spaces making use of Hyperspace Analogue to Language (HAL) model [13, 14]. Hou et al. considered high order entanglements that cannot be reduced to the compositional e ect of lower-order ones, as an indicator of high-level semantic entities. Melucci proposes quantum-like entanglement for modeling the interaction between a user and a document as a composite system [15].
The non-compositionality of entangled systems opened also the door to developing quantum-like models of cognitive phenomena which are not decompositional in nature. Concept combinations have been widely modeled as composite systems [1, 2, 6, 7, 22]. The state of the composite system between two words can be modeled by taking the tensor product of the states of the individual words respectively. If the concept combination is factorizable, then the concept is compositional in the sense it can be expressed as a product of states corresponding to the separate words. A concept that is not factorizable cannot be expressed by either the first or the second word individually, and is deemed non-compositional, and termed entangled [7].
Quantum theory provides a well-developed set of analytical tools that can be used to determine whether the state of a system of interest can be validly decomposed into separate sub-systems. A possible way to test the non-compositional state of a composite system is the violation of Bell’s inequalities. For instance, having calculated the expectation values of variables associated with an experiment, we can fit the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) version of Bell’s inequality [9]. If the CHSH inequality is greater than 2, then the Bell inequality
is violated. It has been empirically found that the maximal possible violation in
√
quantum theory is 2 2 ≈ 2.8284 [8]. This means that each violation being close to the maximal value is very significant. In addition to the CHSH inequality, Bruza et al. [7] propose Clauser-Horne inequalities to analyse the decomposability of quantum systems. The Schmidt decomposition is another way for detecting entanglement in bipartite systems [17]. According to the theorem, after decomposition, each pure state of the tensor product space can be expressed as the product of subsystem orthonormal bases and non-negative real coe cients. The square sum of the coe cients is equal to 1. The number of non-zero coe cients is called Schmidt number. If it equals 1, then the composite state is the product state. If it greater than 1, then the composite state is non-compositional.
So far, researchers have used joint probabilities in cognitive science for calculating expectation values assuming that the outcomes of observables are dependent. Additionally, probabilities can be calculated via trace formula in Gleason’s theory [11]. In a similar way, expectation value of two random variables is defined the product of traces [15]. Finally, probabilities could be re-expressed as function of an angle θ, where θ is defined as a di erence in phase between two random