Quantum communication complexity of distribution testing
(pp1261-1273)
Aleksandrs
Belovs, Arturo Castellanos, Francois Le Gall, Guillaume Malod, and
Alexander A. Sherstov
doi:
https://doi.org/10.26421/QIC21.15-16-1
Abstracts:
The classical communication
complexity of testing closeness of discrete distributions has recently
been studied by
Andoni,
Malkin
and
Nosatzki (ICALP'19).
In this problem, two players each receive
$t$
samples from one distribution over
$[n]$, and the goal is to decide
whether their two distributions are equal, or are
$\epsilon$-far
apart in the $l_1$-distance.
In the present paper we show that the quantum communication complexity
of this problem is $\tilde{O}(n/(t\epsilon^2))$
qubits
when the distributions have low
$l_2$-norm, which gives a quadratic
improvement over the classical communication complexity obtained by
Andoni,
Malkin
and
Nosatzki. We
also obtain a matching lower bound by using the pattern matrix method.
Let us stress that the samples received by each of the parties are
classical, and it is only communication between them that is quantum.
Our results thus give one setting where quantum protocols overcome
classical protocols for a testing problem with purely classical samples.
Key words:
Quantum
communication complexity, distribution testing, lower bounds |