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Published August 2019 | Submitted
Journal Article Open

Quantum information in the Posner model of quantum cognition

Abstract

Matthew Fisher recently postulated a mechanism by which quantum phenomena could influence cognition: Phosphorus nuclear spins may resist decoherence for long times. The spins would serve as biological qubits. The qubits may resist decoherence longer when in Posner molecules. We imagine that Fisher postulates correctly. How adroitly could biological systems process quantum information (QI)? We establish a framework for answering. Additionally, we construct applications of biological qubits to quantum error correction, quantum communication, and quantum computation. First, we posit how the QI encoded by the spins transforms as Posner molecules form. The transformation points to a natural computational basis for qubits in Posner molecules. From the basis, we construct a quantum code that detects arbitrary single-qubit errors. Each molecule encodes one qutrit. Shifting from information storage to computation, we define the model of Posner quantum computation. To illustrate the model's quantum-communication ability, we show how it can teleport information incoherently: A state's weights are teleported. Dephasing results from the entangling operation's simulation of a coarse-grained Bell measurement. Whether Posner quantum computation is universal remains an open question. However, the model's operations can efficiently prepare a Posner state usable as a resource in universal measurement-based quantum computation. The state results from deforming the Affleck–Kennedy–Lieb–Tasaki (AKLT) state and is a projected entangled-pair state (PEPS). Finally, we show that entanglement can affect molecular-binding rates, boosting a binding probability from 33.6% to 100% in an example. This work opens the door for the QI-theoretic analysis of biological qubits and Posner molecules.

Additional Information

© 2018 Published by Elsevier Inc. Received 29 June 2018, Accepted 16 November 2018, Available online 26 November 2018. We thank Ning Bao, Philippe Faist, Matthew Fisher, Steve Flammia, Yaodong Li, Leo Radzihovsky, and Tzu-Chieh Wei for discussions. We thank Fernando Pastawski for help with constructing the quantum error-detecting code. NYH thanks John Preskill for nudges toward this paper's topic and for feedback about drafts. We are grateful for funding from the Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, an NSF Physics Frontiers Center (NSF Grant PHY-1125565) with support from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (GBMF-2644). This research was partially supported by the NSF also under Grant No. NSF PHY-1125915. NYH is grateful for partial support from the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics at Caltech, for a Graduate Fellowship from the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, for a Barbara Groce Graduate Fellowship, and for an NSF grant for the Institute for Theoretical Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics at Harvard University and the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.

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