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Details of Grant 

EPSRC Reference: EP/D072786/1
Title: The Structure of Quantum Information and its Ramifications for IT
Principal Investigator: coecke, Professor B
Other Investigators:
Researcher Co-Investigators:
Project Partners:
Department: Computer Science
Organisation: University of Oxford
Scheme: Advanced Fellowship
Starts: 01 August 2006 Ends: 31 July 2011 Value (£): 459,929
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Fundamentals of Computing New & Emerging Comp. Paradigms
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
No relevance to Underpinning Sectors
Related Grants:
Panel History:
Panel DatePanel NameOutcome
25 Apr 2006 ICT Fellowships 2006 - Interview Panel Deferred
21 Mar 2006 ICT Fellowships 2006 - Sift Panel Deferred
Summary on Grant Application Form
In the not to distant future information technology will have to cope with devices and components which do not obey the usual laws of classical physics but those of quantum physics. This passage is unavoidable due to the decrease of scale required for the increase of computational power and for the miniaturization of devices. But this passage also comes with fascinating new opportunities, for example the quantum algorithms which endanger the current widely used (classical) cryptographic encoding schemes (e.g. bank transactions and e-commerce), and at the same time quantum information and computation (QIC) also provides the corresponding remedy in terms of secure quantum cryptographic and communication schemes. Without any doubt `quantum information technology' is here to stay and promises to become one of the most intriguing endeavors of this new century. But while quantum information and computation is the fruit of a major paradigmatic change which consisted of conceiving the `weird' laws of quantum physics not as a bug but as a feature, the methods haven't changed since the early days of quantum theory, and one can compare the `manipulations of strings of complex numbers and corresponding matrices' with the `acrobatics with 0's and 1's in the early days of computer programming'. At the same time many important questions related to the limits of QIC and a general model for QIC remain unanswered and it is unlikely that the current low-level methods of QIC will provide the necessary capabilities to do so. Here we see a great opportunity for `British-style Computer Science semantics and logic' which we intend to exploit. The high-level mathematical models (e.g. categorical) and corresponding logics developed to cope with distributed, hybrid and in particular resource sensitive computational settings seem to be perfectly tailored for capturing the quantum mechanical realm. Indeed, the starting point for `upgrading QIC' needs to be the quantum mechanical formalism itself, due to von Neumann, but which was also renounced by von Neumann only 3 years after its creation. A breakthrough results in this direction was recently obtained by Abramsky and myself were we stripped down the quantum formalisms to its bare `category-theoretic bones', and within this skeleton we still seemed to be able to do full-blown QIC, but then in a far more conceptual, systematic and straightforward manner. But the greatest merit of this high-level abstraction is that we were also able to show that the formal calculations are equivalent to extremely intuitive manipulations within a very simple graphical calculus, which has the potential to release QIC research from its banner of being hard and completely inaccessible for the non-initiated ones. We intend to turn QIC research into a systematic discipline based on a small set of well-understood primitive concepts, and subject to automated design and development tools, involving the appropriate analogues to the currently available high-level methods from Computer Science such as types, well-behaving calculi, program logics etc. To this means, we intend to further unveil `the structure of quantum information' (both its qualitative and quantitative content), and of its flow, of its interaction with classical information-flow, spatio-temporal causal structure, agents, knowledge & belief and their updates. As some concrete applications of this endeavor we mention an integrated high-level approach to information security, which also in the classical domain is a very delicate matter, impossible to tackle without the appropriate high-level tools. We also intend to develop a general model for the vastly in popularity gaining measurement based quantum computing, hence contributing to the understanding of what is a practicable model of general QIC, and what are its limits.
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