Unique Games with Entangled Provers Are Easy
SIAM Journal on Computing
Parallel repetition of entangled games
Proceedings of the forty-third annual ACM symposium on Theory of computing
Entangled Games Are Hard to Approximate
SIAM Journal on Computing
Proceedings of the 3rd Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference
Testing Product States, Quantum Merlin-Arthur Games and Tensor Optimization
Journal of the ACM (JACM)
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We consider one-round games between a classical verifier and two provers. One of the main questions in this area is the \emph{parallel repetition question}: If the game is played $\ell$ times in parallel, does the maximum winning probability decay exponentially in $\ell$? In the classical setting, this question was answered in the affirmative by Raz. More recently the question arose whether the decay is of the form $(1-\Theta(\eps))^\ell$ where $1-\eps$ is the value of the game and $\ell$ is the number of repetitions. This question is known as the \emph{strong parallel repetition question} and was motivated by its connections to the unique games conjecture. It was resolved by Raz who showed that strong parallel repetition does \emph{not} hold, even in the very special case of games known as XOR games. This opens the question whether strong parallel repetition holds in the case when the provers share entanglement. Evidence for this is provided by the behavior of XOR games, which have strong (in fact \emph{perfect}) parallel repetition, and by the recently proved strong parallel repetition of linear unique games. A similar question was open for games with so-called non-signaling provers. Here the best known parallel repetition theorem is due to Holenstein, and is of the form $(1-\Theta(\eps^2))^\ell$. We show that strong parallel repetition holds neither with entangled provers nor with non-signaling provers. In particular we obtain that Holenstein's bound is tight. Along the way we also provide a tight characterization of the asymptotic behavior of the entangled value under parallel repetition of unique games in terms of a semidefinite program.