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Quantum Algorithms
Schrödinger Bridges via the Hacking of Bayesian Priors in Classical and Quantum Regimes
arXiv
Authors: Clive Cenxin Aw, Peter Sidajaya
Year
2026
Paper ID
30568
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
153
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Bayes' rule is widely regarded as the canonical prescription for belief updating. We show, however, that one can arbitrarily preserve pre-specified beliefs while appearing to perform Bayesian updates via "prior hacking": engineering a reference prior distribution such that, for a fixed channel and evidence, the update matches a chosen target distribution. We prove that this is generically possible in both classical and quantum settings whenever Bayesian inversions are well-defined (with the Petz recovery map as the quantum analogue to Bayes' rule), and provide constructive algorithms for doing so. We further establish a duality between prior hacking and Schrödinger bridge problems (a key object in statistical physics with applications in generative modelling), yielding in the quantum setting a unique, inference-consistent selection among candidate bridges. This formally establishes the Bayes-like updating that Schrödinger bridges are performing with respect to the process as opposed to the reference prior, both in classical and quantum settings.
Why This Paper Matters
- It adds a 2026 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Bayes' rule is widely regarded as the canonical prescription for belief updating.
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