We consider the problem of decoding corrupted error correcting codes with NC0[⊕] circuits in the classical and quantum settings. We show that any such classical circuit can correctly recover only a vanishingly small fraction of messages, if the codewords are sent over a noisy channel with positive error rate. Previously this was known only for linear codes with large dual distance, whereas our result applies to any code. By contrast, we give a simple quantum circuit that correctly decodes the Hadamard code with probability Ω(ε2) even if a (1/2 − ε)-fraction of a codeword is adversarially corrupted. Our classical hardness result is based on an equidistribution phenomenon for multivariate polynomials over a finite field under biased input-distributions. This is proved using a structure- versus-randomness strategy based on a new notion of rank for high-dimensional polynomial maps that may be of independent interest. Our quantum circuit is inspired by a non-local version of the Bernstein-Vazirani problem, a technique to generate “poor man’s cat states” by Watts et al., and a constant-depth quantum circuit for the OR function by Takahashi and Tani.

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doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2024.21
Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics
Networks
15th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (ITCS 2024)
Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica, Amsterdam (CWI), The Netherlands

Briët, J., Buhrman, H., Castro-Silva, D., & Neumann, N. (2024). Noisy decoding by shallow circuits with parities: Classical and quantum (extended abstract). In Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (pp. 21:1–21:11). doi:10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2024.21