Classifying Causal Structures: Ascertaining when Classical Correlations are Constrained by Inequalities

ORAL

Abstract

The classical causal relations between a set of variables, some observed and somelatent, caninduce both equality constraints (typically conditionalindependencies) as well as inequality constraints (Instrumental and Bell inequalities being prototypical examples) on their compatible distribution over the observed variables. Enumerating a causal structure's implied inequality constraints is generally far more difficult than enumerating its equalities. Furthermore, only inequality constraints ever admit violation by quantum correlations. For both those reasons, it is important to classify causal scenarios into those which impose inequality constraints versus those which do not. Here we develop methods for detecting such scenarios by appealing to d-separation, e-separation, and incompatible supports. Many (perhaps all?) scenarios with exclusively equality constraints can be detected via a condition articulated by Henson, Lal and Pusey (HLP). Considering all scenarios with up to 4 observed variables, which number in the thousands, we are able to resolve all but three causal scenarios, providing evidence that the HLP condition is, in fact, exhaustive.

Publication: arXiv:2308.02380 [quant-ph]
https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2308.02380

Presenters

  • Shashaank Khanna

    University of York

Authors

  • Shashaank Khanna

    University of York

  • Matthew Pusey

    University of York

  • Marina Ansanelli

    Perimeter Institute of Theoretical Physics

  • Elie Wolfe

    Perimeter Institute