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Paper 1

Achieving Thresholds via Standalone Belief Propagation on Surface Codes

Pedro Hack, Luca Menti, Francisco Lazaro, Alexandru Paler

Year
2026
Journal
arXiv preprint
DOI
arXiv:2603.05381
arXiv
2603.05381

The usual belief propagation (BP) decoders are, in general, exchanging local information on the Tanner graph of the quantum error-correcting (QEC) code and, in particular, are known to not have a threshold for the surface code. We propose novel BP decoders that exchange messages on the decoding graph and obtain code capacity thresholds via standalone BP for the surface code under depolarizing noise. Our approach, similarly to the minimum weight perfect matching (MWPM) decoder, is applicable to any graphlike QEC code. The thresholds observed with our decoders are close to those obtained by MWPM. This result opens the path towards scalable hardware-accelerated implementations of MWPM-compatible decoders.

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Paper 2

Toward Uncertainty-Aware and Generalizable Neural Decoding for Quantum LDPC Codes

Xiangjun Mi, Frank Mueller

Year
2025
Journal
arXiv preprint
DOI
arXiv:2510.06257
arXiv
2510.06257

Quantum error correction (QEC) is essential for scalable quantum computing, yet decoding errors via conventional algorithms result in limited accuracy (i.e., suppression of logical errors) and high overheads, both of which can be alleviated by inference-based decoders. To date, such machine-learning (ML) decoders lack two key properties crucial for practical fault tolerance: reliable uncertainty quantification and robust generalization to previously unseen codes. To address this gap, we propose \textbf{QuBA}, a Bayesian graph neural decoder that integrates attention to both dot-product and multi-head, enabling expressive error-pattern recognition alongside calibrated uncertainty estimates. Building on QuBA, we further develop \textbf{SAGU }\textbf{(Sequential Aggregate Generalization under Uncertainty)}, a multi-code training framework with enhanced cross-domain robustness enabling decoding beyond the training set. Experiments on bivariate bicycle (BB) codes and their coprime variants demonstrate that (i) both QuBA and SAGU consistently outperform the classical baseline belief propagation (BP), achieving a reduction of on average \emph{one order of magnitude} in logical error rate (LER), and up to \emph{two orders of magnitude} under confident-decision bounds on the coprime BB code $[[154, 6, 16]]$; (ii) QuBA also surpasses state-of-the-art neural decoders, providing an advantage of roughly \emph{one order of magnitude} (e.g., for the larger BB code $[[756, 16, \leq34]]$) even when considering conservative (safe) decision bounds; (iii) SAGU achieves decoding performance comparable to or even outperforming QuBA's domain-specific training approach.

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