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===3.3. Non-projective state update: atomic instruments=== | ===3.3. Non-projective state update: atomic instruments=== |
Revision as of 16:51, 9 November 2022
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Title | Quantum-like modeling in biology with open quantum systems and instruments - en |
Authors | Irina Basieva · Andrei Khrennikov · Masanao Ozawa |
Source | Document |
Date | 2021 |
Journal | Biosystems |
DOI | 10.1016/j.biosystems.2020.104328 |
PUBMED | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33347968/ |
PDF copy | |
License | CC BY |
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Quantum-like modeling in biology with open quantum systems and instruments
Irina Basievaa, Andrei Khrennikova, Masanao Ozawab,c
aLinnaeus University, International Center for Mathematical Modeling in Physics and Cognitive Sciences Växjö, SE-351 95, Sweden
bCollege of Engineering, Chubu University, 1200 Matsumoto-cho, Kasugai 487-8501, Japan
cGraduate School of Informatics, Nagoya University, Chikusa-ku, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan
Abstracto
Presentamos el enfoque novedoso para el modelado matemático de procesos de información en biosistemas. Explora el formalismo matemático y la metodología de la teoría cuántica, especialmente la teoría de la medición cuántica. Este enfoque se conoce como de tipo cuántico y debe distinguirse del estudio de procesos físicos cuánticos genuinos en biosistemas (biofísica cuántica, cognición cuántica). Se basa en la representación de información cuántica del estado del biosistema y el modelado de su dinámica en el marco de la teoría de sistemas cuánticos abiertos. Este artículo comienza con una presentación no amigable para los físicos de la teoría de la medición cuántica, desde la formulación original de von Neumann hasta la teoría moderna de los instrumentos cuánticos. Luego, este último se aplica a combinaciones modelo de efectos cognitivos y regulación génica del metabolismo de glucosa/lactosa en la bacteria Escherichia coli. La construcción más general de los instrumentos cuánticos se basa en el esquema de medición indirecta, en el que el aparato de medición desempeña el papel del medio ambiente para un biosistema. La esencia biológica de este esquema se ilustra mediante la formalización cuántica de la teoría de la sensación-percepción de Helmholtz. Luego pasamos a la dinámica de sistemas abiertos y consideramos la ecuación maestra cuántica, concentrándonos en los procesos cuánticos de Markov. En este marco, modelamos el funcionamiento de funciones biológicas como funciones psicológicas y mutación epigenética.
Keywords
Formalismo matemático de la mecánica cuántica, Sistemas cuánticos abiertos, Instrumentos cuánticos, Dinámica cuántica de Markov, Regulación génica, Efectos psicológicos, Cognición, Mutación epigenética, Funciones biológicas
Introducción
Los métodos matemáticos estándar se desarrollaron originalmente para servir a la física clásica. El análisis real sirvió como base matemática de la mecánica newtoniana (Newton, 1687)[1] (y posterior formalismo hamiltoniano); la mecánica estadística clásica estimuló el enfoque teórico de la medida de la teoría de la probabilidad, formalizado en la axiomática de Kolmogorov (Kolmogorov, 1933).[2] Sin embargo, el comportamiento de los sistemas biológicos difiere esencialmente del comportamiento de los sistemas mecánicos, digamos cuerpos rígidos, moléculas de gas o fluidos. Por lo tanto, aunque las “matemáticas clásicas” aún desempeñan un papel crucial en el modelado biológico, parece que no pueden describir completamente la rica complejidad de los biosistemas y las peculiaridades de su comportamiento, en comparación con los sistemas mecánicos. Se están solicitando nuevos métodos matemáticos para modelar biosistemas.(a,b)
En este artículo, presentamos las aplicaciones del formalismo matemático de la mecánica cuántica y su metodología para modelar el comportamiento de los biosistemas. (c) Los últimos años se caracterizaron por una explosión de interés por las aplicaciones de la teoría cuántica fuera de la física, especialmente en la psicología cognitiva. toma de decisiones, procesamiento de información en el cerebro, biología molecular, genética y epigenética, y teoría de la evolución.4 Llamamos a los modelos correspondientes de tipo cuántico. No están dirigidos al modelado a nivel micro de procesos físicos cuánticos reales en biosistemas, digamos en células o cerebros (cf. con aplicaciones biológicas de la teoría física cuántica genuina Penrose 1989[3], Umezawa 1993[4], Hameroff 1994[5], Vitiello 1995[6], Vitiello 2001[7], Arndt et al. al., 2009[8], Bernroider y Summhammer 2012[9], Bernroider 2017[10]). El modelado de tipo cuántico funciona desde el punto de vista de la teoría cuántica como teoría de la medición. Este es el punto de vista original de Bohr que condujo a la interpretación de Copenhague de la mecánica cuántica (ver Plotnitsky, 2009[11] para una presentación clara y detallada de los puntos de vista de Bohr). Una de las principales bioespecialidades es la consideración de las automedidas que los biosistemas realizan sobre sí mismos. En nuestro modelo, la capacidad de realizar automedidas se considera la característica básica de las funciones biológicas (consulte la Sección 8.2 y el artículo Khrennikov et al., 2018[12]).
Modelos de tipo cuántico (Khrennikov, 2004b[13])
reflejan las características de los procesos biológicos que coinciden naturalmente con el formalismo cuántico. En dicho modelado, es útil explorar la teoría de la información cuántica, que se puede aplicar no solo al micromundo de los sistemas cuánticos. Generalmente, los sistemas que procesan información de forma cuántica no necesitan ser sistemas físicos cuánticos; en particular, pueden ser biosistemas macroscópicos. Sorprendentemente, la misma teoría matemática se puede aplicar a todas las escalas biológicas: desde proteínas, células y cerebros hasta humanos y ecosistemas; podemos hablar de biología de la información cuántica (Asano et al., 2015a [14]).
En el modelado de tipo cuántico, la teoría cuántica se considera como un cálculo para la predicción y transformación de probabilidades. El cálculo de probabilidad cuántica (QP) (Sección 2) difiere esencialmente del cálculo de probabilidad clásico (CP) basado en la axiomática de Kolmogorov (Kolmogorov, 1933[15]).En CP, los estados de los sistemas aleatorios están representados por medidas de probabilidad y los observables por variables aleatorias; en QP, los estados de los sistemas aleatorios se representan mediante vectores normalizados en un espacio de Hilbert complejo (estados puros) o, en general, mediante operadores de densidad (estados mixtos).5 Las superposiciones representadas por estados puros se utilizan para modelar la incertidumbre que aún no ha sido resuelta por una medición. El uso de superposiciones en biología se ilustra en la Fig. 1 (consulte la Sección 10 y el artículo Khrennikov et al., 2018) [16]
para el modelo correspondiente). La actualización QP resultante de una observación se basa en el postulado de proyección o transformaciones más generales de estados cuánticos — en el marco de la teoría de instrumentos cuánticos (Davies y Lewis, 1970[17], Davies, 1976[18], Ozawa, 1984[19], Yuen, 1987[20], Ozawa , 1997[21], Ozawa, 2004[22], Okamura y Ozawa, 2016[23]) (Sección 3).
Hacemos hincapié en que el modelado de tipo cuántico eleva el papel de la conveniencia y la simplicidad de la representación cuántica de estados y observables. (Ignoramos pragmáticamente el problema de la interrelación de CP y QP). En particular, el espacio de estado cuántico tiene una estructura lineal y los modelos lineales son más simples. La transición de la dinámica no lineal clásica de los procesos electroquímicos en biosistemas a la dinámica lineal cuántica esencialmente acelera la evolución del estado (Sección 8.4). Sin embargo, en este marco, "estado" es el estado de información cuántica de un biosistema utilizado para el procesamiento de la incertidumbre cuántica especial (Sección 8.2).
Observaciones
En los libros de texto sobre mecánica cuántica, se suele señalar que la principal característica distintiva de la teoría cuántica es la presencia de observables incompatibles. Recordemos que dos observables y son incompatibles si es imposible asignarles valores conjuntamente. En el modelo probabilístico, esto lleva a la imposibilidad de determinar su distribución de probabilidad conjunta (JPD). Los ejemplos básicos de observables incompatibles son la posición y el momento de un sistema cuántico, o las proyecciones de espín (o polarización) en diferentes ejes. En el formalismo matemático, la incompatibilidad se describe como la no conmutatividad de los operadores hermitianos. y representando observables, i.e.,
Aquí nos referimos al modelo original y aún básico y ampliamente utilizado de observables cuánticos, Von Neumann 1955[24] (Sección 3.2).
La incompatibilidad-no conmutatividad se usa ampliamente en la física cuántica y los observables físicos básicos, como las proyecciones de posición y momento, espín y polarización, se representan tradicionalmente en este paradigma, mediante operadores hermitianos. También señalamos numerosas aplicaciones de este enfoque a la cognición, la psicología, la toma de decisiones (Khrennikov, 2004a[25], Busemeyer y Bruza, 2012[26], Bagarello, 2019[27]) (ver especialmente el artículo (Bagarello et al., 2018[28]) dedicado a la cuantificación de la Relaciones de incertidumbre de Heisenberg en la toma de decisiones). Aún así, puede que no sea lo suficientemente general para nuestro propósito: para el modelado de tipo cuántico en biología, ningún tipo de bioestadística no clásica se puede delegar fácilmente al modelo de observaciones de von Neumann. Por ejemplo, ni siquiera los efectos cognitivos más básicos pueden describirse de manera coherente con el modelo de observación estándar (Khrennikov et al., 2014[29], Basieva y Khrennikov, 2015[30]).
Exploraremos teorías más generales de las observaciones basadas en instrumentos cuánticos (Davies y Lewis, 1970[17], Davies, 1976[18], Ozawa, 1984[19], Yuen, 1987[20], Ozawa, 1997[21], Ozawa, 2004[31], Okamura y Ozawa, 2016[23]) y encontraremos herramientas útiles para aplicaciones al modelado de efectos cognitivos (Ozawa y Khrennikov, 2020a[32], Ozawa y Khrennikov, 2020b[33]). Discutiremos esta pregunta en la Sección 3 y la ilustraremos con ejemplos de cognición y biología molecular en las Secciones 6, 7. En el marco de la teoría cuántica de instrumentos, el punto crucial no es la conmutatividad frente a la no conmutatividad de los operadores que representan simbólicamente observables, sino la forma matemática de la transformación de estado resultante de la acción posterior de la (auto)observación. En el enfoque estándar, esta transformación viene dada por una proyección ortogonal en el subespacio de vectores propios correspondientes a la salida de la observación. Este es el postulado de proyección. En la teoría cuántica de instrumentos, las transformaciones de estado son más generales.
El cálculo de instrumentos cuánticos está estrechamente relacionado con la teoría de los sistemas cuánticos abiertos (Ingarden et al., 1997[34]), sistemas cuánticos que interactúan con los entornos. Hacemos notar que en algunas situaciones, los sistemas físicos cuánticos pueden requerir (al menos aproximadamente) aislados. Sin embargo, los biosistemas son muy abiertos. Como destaca Schrödinger (1944[35]), un biosistema completamente aislado está muerto. Esto último explica por qué la teoría de los sistemas cuánticos abiertos y, en particular, el cálculo de instrumentos cuánticos juegan el papel básico en las aplicaciones a la biología, como el aparato matemático de la biología cuántica de la información (Asano et al., 2015a[36]).
Dentro de la teoría de los sistemas cuánticos abiertos, modelamos la evolución epigenética (Asano et al., 2012b[37], Asano et al., 2015b[38]) (Secciones 9, 11.2) y el desempeño de las funciones psicológicas (cognitivas) realizadas por el cerebro (Asano et al., 2015b). 2011[39], Asano et al., 2015b[38], Khrennikov et al., 2018[40]
Para biólogos matemáticamente suficientemente bien educados, pero sin conocimiento en física, podemos recomendar un libro (Khrennikov, 2016a[41]) que combina las presentaciones de CP y QP con una breve introducción al formalismo cuántico, incluida la teoría de los instrumentos cuánticos y las probabilidades condicionales.
2. Probabilidad clásica versus cuántica
CP fue formalizada matemáticamente por Kolmogorov (1933)[15] Este es el cálculo de medidas de probabilidad, donde un peso no negativose asigna a cualquier evento . La principal propiedad de CP es su aditividad: si dos eventos son disjuntos, entonces la probabilidad de disyunción de estos eventos es igual a la suma de probabilidades:
QP es el cálculo de amplitudes complejas o, en el formalismo abstracto, vectores complejos. Así, en lugar de operaciones sobre medidas de probabilidad, se opera con vectores. Podemos decir que QP es un modelo vectorial de razonamiento probabilístico. Cada amplitud compleja da la probabilidad por la regla de Born: La probabilidad se obtiene como el cuadrado del valor absoluto de la amplitud compleja.
(para la formalización del espacio de Hilbert, consulte la Sección 3.2, fórmula (7)). Al operar con amplitudes de probabilidad complejas, en lugar de la operación directa con probabilidades, se pueden violar las leyes básicas de CP.
En CP, la fórmula de probabilidad total (FTP) se obtiene usando la aditividad de la probabilidad y la fórmula de Bayes, la definición de probabilidad condicional, ,
Considere el par, y , de variables aleatorias clásicas discretas. Entonces
Así, en CP la -La distribución de probabilidad se puede calcular a partir de la -probabilidad y las probabilidades condicionales
En QP, el FTP clásico es perturbado por el término de interferencia (Khrennikov, 2010[42]); para observables cuánticos dicotómicos y Del tipo von Neumann, es decir, dado por operadores hermitianos y , la versión cuántica de FTP tiene la forma:
Si el término de interferencia7 es positivo, entonces el cálculo QP generaría una probabilidad mayor que su contraparte CP dada por el FTP clásico (2). En particular, esta amplificación de probabilidad es la base de la supremacía de la computación cuántica.
Hay una gran cantidad de datos estadísticos de la psicología cognitiva, la toma de decisiones, la biología molecular, la genética y la epigenética que demuestran que los biosistemas, desde las proteínas y las células (Asano et al., 2015b[38]) hasta los humanos (Khrennikov, 2010[43], Busemeyer y Bruza, 2012[26]) utilizan esta amplificación y operar con actualizaciones que no sean de CP. Continuamos nuestra presentación con tales ejemplos.
3. Instrumentos cuánticos
3.1. Algunas palabras sobre el formalismo cuántico
Denotamos por un espacio complejo de Hilbert. Por simplicidad, asumimos que es de dimensión finita. Estados puros de un sistema están dados por vectores normalizados de y estados mixtos por operadores de densidad (operadores semidefinidos positivos con traza unitaria). El espacio de los operadores de densidad se denota por (). El espacio de todos los operadores lineales en se denota con el símbolo . A su vez, este es un espacio lineal. Además, es el espacio complejo de Hilbert con el producto escalar,. Consideramos operadores lineales actuando en . Se llaman superoperadores.
La dinámica del estado puro de un sistema cuántico aislado se describe mediante la ecuación de Schrödinger:
dónde es el hamiltoniano del sistema. Esta ecuación implica que el estado puro evoluciona unitariamente , donde Es un grupo paramétrico de operadores unitarios. , . En física cuántica, hamiltoniano está asociado con la energía observable. La misma interpretación se utiliza en biofísica cuántica (Arndt et al., 2009).[44] Sin embargo, en nuestro modelo cuántico que describe el procesamiento de información en biosistemas, el operador no tiene acoplamiento directo con la energía física. Este es el generador de evolución que describe las interacciones de información.
La dinámica de Schrödinger para un estado puro implica que la dinámica de un estado mixto (representado por un operador de densidad) se describe mediante la ecuación de von Neumann:
3.2. Formalismo de Von Neumann para observables cuánticos
En el formalismo cuántico original (Von Neumann, 1955),[45] físico observable está representado por un operador hermitiano .Consideramos solo operadores con espectros discretos :dónde es el proyector sobre el subespacio de correspondiente al valor propio . Supongamos que el estado del sistema se representa matemáticamente mediante un operador de densidad . Entonces la probabilidad de obtener la respuestar viene dada por la regla de Born
y de acuerdo con el postulado de proyección, el estado posterior a la medición se obtiene a través de la transformación de estado:
Para comodidad del lector, presentamos estas fórmulas para un estado inicial puro . La regla de Born tiene la forma:
La transformación de estado viene dada por el postulado de proyección:
Aquí el operador observable (su descomposición espectral) determina de forma única las transformaciones del estado de retroalimentación para resultados
El mapa dada por (9) es el ejemplo más simple (pero muy importante) de instrumento cuántico.
3.3. Non-projective state update: atomic instruments
In general, the statistical properties of any measurement are characterized by
- the output probability distribution , the probability distribution of the output of the measurement in the input state ;
- the quantum state reduction ,the state change from the input state to the output state conditional upon the outcome of the measurement.
In von Neumann’s formulation, the statistical properties of any measurement of an observable is uniquely determined by Born’s rule (5) and the projection postulate (6), and they are represented by the map (9), an instrument of von Neumann type. However, von Neumann’s formulation does not reflect the fact that the same observable represented by the Hermitian operator in can be measured in many ways.8 Formally, such measurement-schemes are represented by quantum instruments.
Now, we consider the simplest quantum instruments of non von Neumann type, known as atomic instruments. We start with recollection of the notion of POVM (probability operator valued measure); we restrict considerations to POVMs with a discrete domain of definition . POVM is a map such that for each , is a positive contractive Hermitian operator (called effect) (i.e., or any ), and the normalization condition
holds, where is the unit operator. It is assumed that for any measurement, the output probability distribution is given by
where is a POVM. For atomic instruments, it is assumed that effects are represented concretely in the form
where is a linear operator in . Hence, the normalization condition has the form .9 The Born rule can be written similarly to (5):
It is assumed that the post-measurement state transformation is based on the map:
* |
so the quantum state reduction is given by
* |
The map given by (13) is an atomic quantum instrument. We remark that the Born rule (12) can be written in the form
* | f |
Let be a Hermitian operator in . Consider a POVM with the domain of definition given by the spectrum of . This POVM represents a measurement of observable if Born’s rule holds:
Thus, in principle, probabilities of outcomes are still encoded in the spectral decomposition of operator or in other words operators should be selected in such a way that they generate the probabilities corresponding to the spectral decomposition of the symbolic representation of observables , i.e., is uniquely determined by as . We can say that this operator carries only information about the probabilities of outcomes, in contrast to the von Neumann scheme, operator does not encode the rule of the state update. For an atomic instrument, measurements of the observable has the unique output probability distribution by the Born’s rule (16), but has many different quantum state reductions depending of the decomposition of the effect in such a way that
3.4. General theory (Davies–Lewis–Ozawa)
Finally, we formulate the general notion of quantum instrument. A superoperator acting in is called positive if it maps the set of positive semi-definite operators into itself. We remark that, for each given by (13) can be considered as linear positive map.
Generally any map , where for each , the map is a positive superoperator is called Davies–Lewis (Davies and Lewis, 1970) quantum instrument.
Here index denotes the observable coupled to this instrument. The probabilities of -outcomes are given by Born’s rule in form (15) and the state-update by transformation (14). However, Yuen (1987) pointed out that the class of Davies–Lewis instruments is too general to exclude physically non-realizable instruments. Ozawa (1984) introduced the important additional condition to ensure that every quantum instrument is physically realizable. This is the condition of complete positivity.
A superoperator is called completely positive if its natural extension to the tensor product is again a positive superoperator on . A map , where for each , the map is a completely positive superoperator is called Davies–Lewis–Ozawa (Davies and Lewis, 1970, Ozawa, 1984) quantum instrument or simply quantum instrument. As we shall see in Section 4, complete positivity is a sufficient condition for an instrument to be physically realizable. On the other hand, necessity is derived as follows (Ozawa, 2004).
Every observable of a system is identified with the observable of a system with any system external to .10
Then, every physically realizable instrument measuring should be identified with the instrument measuring such that . This implies that is agin a positive superoperator, so that is completely positive.
Similarly, any physically realizable instrument measuring system should have its extended instrument measuring system for any external system. This is fulfilled only if is completely positive. Thus, complete positivity is a necessary condition for to describe a physically realizable instrument.
4. Quantum instruments from the scheme of indirect measurements
The basic model for construction of quantum instruments is based on the scheme of indirect measurements. This scheme formalizes the following situation: measurement’s outputs are generated via interaction of a system with a measurement apparatus . This apparatus consists of a complex physical device interacting with and a pointer that shows the result of measurement, say spin up or spin down. An observer can see only outputs of the pointer and he associates these outputs with the values of the observable for the system . Thus, the indirect measurement scheme involves:
- the states of the systems and the apparatus
- the operator representing the interaction-dynamics for the system
- the meter observable giving outputs of the pointer of the apparatus .
An indirect measurement model, introduced in Ozawa (1984) as a “(general) measuring process”, is a quadruple
consisting of a Hilbert space , a density operator , a unitary operator on the tensor product of the state spaces of and and a Hermitian operator on . By this measurement model, the Hilbert space describes the states of the apparatus , the unitary operator describes the time-evolution of the composite system , the density operator describes the initial state of the apparatus , and the Hermitian operator describes the meter observable of the apparatus . Then, the output probability distribution in the system state is given by
where is the spectral projection of for the eigenvalue .
The change of the state of the system caused by the measurement for the outcome is represented with the aid of the map in the space of density operators defined as
where is the partial trace over . Then, the map turn out to be a quantum instrument. Thus, the statistical properties of the measurement realized by any indirect measurement model is described by a quantum measurement. We remark that conversely any quantum instrument can be represented via the indirect measurement model (Ozawa, 1984). Thus, quantum instruments mathematically characterize the statistical properties of all the physically realizable quantum measurements.
5. Modeling of the process of sensation–perception within indirect measurement scheme
Foundations of theory of unconscious inference for the formation of visual impressions were set in 19th century by H. von Helmholtz. Although von Helmholtz studied mainly visual sensation–perception, he also applied his theory for other senses up to culmination in theory of social unconscious inference. By von Helmholtz here are two stages of the cognitive process, and they discriminate between sensation and perception as follows:
- Sensation is a signal which the brain interprets as a sound or visual image, etc.
- Perception is something to be interpreted as a preference or selective attention, etc.
In the scheme of indirect measurement, sensations represent the states of the sensation system of human and the perception system plays the role of the measurement apparatus . The unitary operator describes the process of interaction between the sensation and perception states. This quantum modeling of the process of sensation–perception was presented in paper (Khrennikov, 2015) with application to bistable perception and experimental data from article (Asano et al., 2014).
6. Modeling of cognitive effects
In cognitive and social science, the following opinion pool is known as the basic example of the order effect. This is the Clinton–Gore opinion pool (Moore, 2002). In this experiment, American citizens were asked one question at a time, e.g.,
- “Is Bill Clinton honest and trustworthy?”
- “Is Al Gore honest and trustworthy?”
Two sequential probability distributions were calculated on the basis of the experimental statistical data, and (first question and then question and vice verse).
6.1. Order effect for sequential questioning
The statistical data from this experiment demonstrated the question order effect QOE, dependence of sequential joint probability distribution for answers to the questions on their order . We remark that in the CP-model these probability distributions coincide:
where is a sample space and is a probability measure.
QOE stimulates application of the QP-calculus to cognition, see paper (Wang and Busemeyer, 2013). The authors of this paper stressed that noncommutative feature of joint probabilities can be modeled by using noncommutativity of incompatible quantum observables represented by Hermitian operators . Observable represents the Clinton-question and observable represents Gore-question. In this model, QOE is identical incompatibility–noncommutativity of observables:
6.2. Response replicability effect for sequential questioning
The approach based on identification of the order effect with noncommutative representation of questions (Wang and Busemeyer, 2013) was criticized in paper (Khrennikov et al., 2014). To discuss this paper, we recall the notion of response replicability. Suppose that a person, say John, is asked some question and suppose that he replies, e.g, “yes”. If immediately after this, he is asked the same question again, then he replies “yes” with probability one. We call this property response replicability. In quantum physics, response replicability is expressed by the projection postulate.The Clinton–Gore opinion poll as well as typical decision making experiments satisfy response replicability. Decision making has also another feature - response replicability. Suppose that after answering the -question with say the “yes”-answer, John is asked another question . He replied to it with some answer. And then he is asked again. In the aforementioned social opinion pool, John repeats her original answer to , “yes” (with probability one).
This behavioral phenomenon we call response replicability. Combination of with and response replicability is called the response replicability effect RRE.
6.3. “QOE+RRE”: described by quantum instruments of non-projective type
In paper (Khrennikov et al., 2014), it was shown that by using the von Neumann calculus it is impossible to combine RRE with QOE. To generate QOE, Hermitian operators should be noncommutative, but the latter destroys response replicability of . This was a rather unexpected result. It made even impression that, although the basic cognitive effects can be quantum-likely modeled separately, their combinations cannot be described by the quantum formalism.
However, recently it was shown that theory of quantum instruments provides a simple solution of the combination of QOE and RRE effects, see Ozawa and Khrennikov (2020a) for construction of such instruments. These instruments are of non-projective type. Thus, the essence of QOE is not in the structure of observables, but in the structure of the state transformation generated by measurements’ feedback. QOE is not about the joint measurement and incompatibility (noncommutativity) of observables, but about sequential measurement of observables and sequential (mental-)state update. Quantum instruments which are used in Ozawa and Khrennikov (2020a) to combine QOE and RRE correspond to measurement of observables represented by commuting operators . Moreover, it is possible to prove that (under natural mathematical restriction) QOE and RRE can be jointly modeled only with the aid of quantum instruments for commuting observables.
6.4. Mental realism
Since very beginning of quantum mechanics, noncommutativity of operators representing observables was considered as the mathematical representation of their incompatibility. In philosophic terms, this situation is treated as impossibility of the realistic description. In cognitive science, this means that there exist mental states such that an individual cannot assign the definite values to both observables (e.g., questions). The mathematical description of QOE with observables represented by noncommutative operators (in the von Neumann’s scheme) in Wang and Busemeyer (2013) and Wang et al. (2014) made impression that this effect implies rejection of mental realism. The result of Ozawa and Khrennikov (2020a) demonstrates that, in spite of experimentally well documented QOE, the mental realism need not be rejected. QOE can be modeled within the realistic picture mathematically given by the joint probability distribution of observables and , but with the noncommutative action of quantum instruments updating the mental state:
This is the good place to remark that if, for some state , then QOE disappears, even if . This can be considered as the right formulation of Wang–Bussemeyer statement on connection of QOE with noncommutativity. Instead of noncommutativity of operators and symbolically representing quantum obseravbles, one has to speak about noncommutativity of corresponding quantum instruments.
7. Genetics: interference in glucose/lactose metabolism
In paper (Asano et al., 2012a), there was developed a quantum-like model describing the gene regulation of glucose/lactose metabolism in Escherichia coli bacterium.11 There are several types of E. coli characterized by the metabolic system. It was demonstrated that the concrete type of E. coli can be described by the well determined linear operators; we find the invariant operator quantities characterizing each type. Such invariant operator quantities can be calculated from the obtained statistical data. So, the quantum-like representation was reconstructed from experimental data.
Let us consider an event system means the event that E. coli activates its lactose operon, that is, the event that -galactosidase is produced through the transcription of mRNA from a gene in lactose operon; means the event that E. coli does not activates its lactose operon.
This system of events corresponds to activation observable that is mathematically represented by a quantum instrument . Consider now another system of events where means the event that an E. coli bacterium detects a lactose molecular in cell’s surrounding environment, means detection of a glucose molecular. This system of events corresponds to detection observable that is represented by a quantum instrument .
In this model, bacterium’s interaction–reaction with glucose/lactose environment is described as sequential action of two quantum instruments, first detection and then activation. As was shown in Asano et al. (2012a), for each concrete type of E. coli bacterium, these quantum instruments can be reconstructed from the experimental data; in Asano et al. (2012a), reconstruction was performed for W3110-type of E. coli bacterium. The classical FTP with observables and is violated, the interference term, see (2), was calculated (Asano et al., 2012a).
8. Open quantum systems: interaction of a biosystem with its environment
As was already emphasized, any biosystem is fundamentally open. Hence, dynamics of its state has to be modeled via an interaction with surrounding environment . The states of and are represented in the Hilbert spaces and . The compound system is represented in the tensor product Hilbert spaces . This system is treated as an isolated system and in accordance with quantum theory, dynamics of its pure state can be described by the Schrödinger equation:
where is the pure state of the system and is its Hamiltonian. This equation implies that the pure state evolves unitarily :. Here . Hamiltonian (evolution-generator) describing information interactions has the form , where ,are Hamiltonians of the systems and is the interaction Hamiltonian.12 This equation implies that evolution of the density operator of the system is described by von Neumann equation:
However, the state is too complex for any mathematical analysis: the environment includes too many degrees of freedom. Therefore, we are interested only the state of ; its dynamics is obtained via tracing of the state of w.r.t. the degrees of freedom of :
Generally this equation, the quantum master equation, is mathematically very complicated. A variety of approximations is used in applications.
8.1. Quantum Markov model: Gorini–Kossakowski–Sudarshan–Lindbladequation
The simplest approximation of quantum master equation (23) is the quantum Markov dynamics given by the Gorini–Kossakowski–Sudarshan–Lindblad (GKSL) equation (Ingarden et al., 1997) (in physics, it is commonly called simply the Lindblad equation; this is the simplest quantum master equation):
where Hermitian operator (Hamiltonian) describes the internal dynamics of and the superoperator , acting in the space of density operators, describes an interaction with environment . This superoperator is often called Lindbladian. The GKSL-equation is a quantum master equation for Markovian dynamics. In this paper, we have no possibility to explain the notion of quantum Markovianity in more detail. Quantum master equation (23) describes generally non-Markovean dynamics.
8.2. Biological functions in the quantum Markov framework
We turn to the open system dynamics with the GKSL-equation. In our modeling, Hamiltonian and Lindbladian represent some special biological function (see Khrennikov et al., 2018) for details. Its functioning results from interaction of internal and external information flows. In Sections 10, 11.3, is some psychological function; in the simplest case represents a question asked to (say is a human being). In Section 7, is the gene regulation of glucose/lactose metabolism in Escherichia coli bacterium. In Sections 9, 11.2, represents the process of epigenetic mutation. Symbolically biological function is represented as a quantum observable: Hermitian operator with the spectral decomposition , where labels outputs of . Theory of quantum Markov state-dynamics describes the process of generation of these outputs.
In the mathematical model (Asano et al., 2015b, Asano et al., 2017b, Asano et al., 2017a, Asano et al., 2015a, Asano et al., 2012b, Asano et al., 2011, Asano et al., 2012a), the outputs of biological function are generated via approaching a steady state of the GKSL-dynamics:
such that it matches the spectral decomposition of , i.e.,
where
This means that is diagonal in an orthonormal basis consisting of eigenvectors of . This state, or more precisely, this decomposition of density operator , is the classical statistical mixture of the basic information states determining this biological function. The probabilities in state’s decomposition (26) are interpreted statistically.
Consider a large ensemble of biosystems with the state interacting with environment . (We recall that mathematically the interaction is encoded in the Lindbladian ) Resulting from this interaction, biological function produces output with probability . We remark that in the operator terms the probability is expressed as
This interpretation can be applied even to a single biosystem that meets the same environment many times.
It should be noted that limiting state expresses the stability with respect to the influence of concrete environment . Of course, in the real world the limit-state would be never approached. The mathematical formula (25) describes the process of stabilization, damping of fluctuations. But, they would be never disappear completely with time.
We note that a steady state satisfies the stationary GKSL-equation:
It is also important to point that generally a steady state of the quantum master equation is not unique, it depends on the class of initial conditions.
8.3. Operation of biological functions through decoherence
To make the previous considerations concrete, let us consider a pure quantum state as the initial state. Suppose that a biological function is dichotomous, , and it is symbolically represented by the Hermitian operator that is diagonal in orthonormal basis , . (We consider the two dimensional state space — the qubit space.) Let the initial state has the form of superposition
where . The quantum master dynamics is not a pure state dynamics: sooner or later (in fact, very soon), this superposition representing a pure state will be transferred into a density matrix representing a mixed state. Therefore, from the very beginning it is useful to represent superposition (28) in terms of a density matrix:
State’s purity, superposition, is characterized by the presence ofnonzero off-diagonal terms.
Superposition encodes uncertainty with respect to the concrete state basis, in our case ,. Initially biological function was in the state of uncertainty between two choices . This is genuine quantum(-like) uncertainty. Uncertainty, about possible actions in future. For example, for psychological function (Section 10) representing answering to some question, say “to buy property” ( ) and its negation ( ) , a person whose state is described by superposition (28) is uncertain to act with ( ) or with ( ) . Thus, a superposition-type state describes individual uncertainty, i.e., uncertainty associated with the individual biosystem and not with an ensemble of biosystems; with the single act of functioning of and not with a large series of such acts.
Resolution of uncertainty with respect to is characterized by washing off the off-diagonal terms in (29) The quantum dynamics (24) suppresses the off-diagonal terms and, finally, a diagonal density matrix representing a steady state of this dynamical systems is generated:
This is a classical statistical mixture. It describes an ensemble of biosystems; statistically they generate outputs with probabilities . In the same way, the statistical interpretation can be used for a single system that performs -functioning at different instances of time (for a long time series).
In quantum physics, the process of washing off the off-diagonal elements in a density matrix is known as the process of decoherence. Thus, the described model of can be called operation of biological function through decoherence.
8.4. Linearity of quantum representation: exponential speed up for biological functioning
The quantum-like modeling does not claim that biosystems are fundamentally quantum. A more natural picture is that they are a complex classical biophysical systems and the quantum-like model provides the information representation of classical biophysical processes, in genes, proteins, cells, brains. One of the advantages of this representation is its linearity. The quantum state space is a complex Hilbert space and dynamical equations are linear differential equations. For finite dimensional state spaces, these are just ordinary differential equations with complex coefficients (so, the reader should not be afraid of such pathetic names as Schrödinger, von Neumann, or Gorini–Kossakowski–Sudarshan–Lindblad equations). The classical biophysical dynamics beyond the quantum information representation is typically nonlinear and very complicated. The use of the linear space representation simplifies the processing structure. There are two viewpoints on this simplification, external and internal. The first one is simplification of mathematical modeling, i.e., simplification of study of bioprocesses (by us, external observers). The second one is more delicate and interesting. We have already pointed to one important specialty of applications of the quantum theory to biology. Here, systems can perform self-observations. So, in the process of evolution say a cell can “learn” via such self-observations that it is computationally profitable to use the linear quantum-like representation. And now, we come to the main advantage of linearity.
The linear dynamics exponentially speeds up information processing. Solutions of the GKSL-equation can be represented in the form , where is the superoperator given by the right-hand side of the GKSL-equation. In the finite dimensional case, decoherence dynamics is expressed via factors of the form , where . Such factors are exponentially decreasing. Quantum-like linear realization of biological functions is exponentially rapid comparing with nonlinear classical dynamics.
The use of the quantum information representation means that generally large clusters of classical biophysical states are encoded by a few quantum states. It means huge information compressing. It also implies increasing of stability in state-processing. Noisy nonlinear classical dynamics is mapped to dynamics driven by linear quantum(-like) equation of say GKSL-type.
The latter has essentially simpler structure and via selection of the operator coefficients encoding symbolically interaction within the system and with its surrounding environment , can establish dynamics with stabilization regimes leading to steady states.
9. Epigenetic evolution within theory of open quantum systems
In paper (Asano et al., 2012b), a general model of the epigenetic evolution unifying neo-Darwinian with neo-Lamarckian approaches was created in the framework of theory of open quantum systems. The process of evolution is represented in the form of adaptive dynamics given by the quantum(-like) master equation describing the dynamics of the information state of epigenome in the process of interaction with surrounding environment. This model of the epigenetic evolution expresses the probabilities for observations which can be done on epigenomes of cells; this (quantum-like) model does not give a detailed description of cellular processes. The quantum operational approach provides a possibility to describe by one model all known types of cellular epigenetic inheritance.
To give some hint about the model, we consider one gene, say . This is the system in Section 8.1. It interacts with the surrounding environment a cell containing this gene and other cells that send signals to this concrete cell and through it to the gene . As a consequence of this interaction some epigenetic mutation in the gene can happen. It would change the level of the -expression.
For the moment, we ignore that there are other genes. In this oversimplified model, the mutation can be described within the two dimensional state space, complex Hilbert space (qubit space). States of without and with mutation are represented by the orthogonal basis ,; these vectors express possible epigenetic changes of the fixed type .
A pure quantum information state has the form of superposition.
Now, we turn to the general scheme of Section 8.2 with the biological function expressing -epimutation in one fixed gene. The quantum Markov dynamics (24) resolves uncertainty encoded in superposition (“modeling epimutations as decoherence”). The classical statistical mixture , see (30), is approached. Its diagonal elements give the probabilities of the events: “no -epimutation” and “-epimutation”. These probabilities are interpreted statistically: in a large population of cells, cells, , the number of cells with -epimutation is . This -epimutation in a cell population would stabilize completely to the steady state only in the infinite time. Therefore in reality there are fluctuations (of decreasing amplitude) in any finite interval of time.
Finally, we point to the advantage of the quantum-like dynamics of interaction of genes with environment — dynamics’ linearity implying exponential speed up of the process of epigenetic evolution (Section 8.4).
10. Connecting electrochemical processes in neural networks with quantum informational processing
As was emphasized in introduction, quantum-like models are formal operational models describing information processing in biosystems. (in contrast to studies in quantum biology — the science about the genuine quantum physical processes in biosystems). Nevertheless, it is interesting to connect the structure quantum information processing in a biosystem with physical and chemical processes in it. This is a problem of high complexity. Paper (Khrennikov et al., 2018) presents an attempt to proceed in this direction for the human brain — the most complicated biosystem (and at the same time the most interesting for scientists). In the framework of quantum information theory, there was modeled information processing by brain’s neural networks. The quantum information formalization of the states of neural networks is coupled with the electrochemical processes in the brain. The key-point is representation of uncertainty generated by the action potential of a neuron as quantum(-like) superposition of the basic mental states corresponding to a neural code, see Fig. 1 for illustration.
Consider information processing by a single neuron; this is the system (see Section 8.2). Its quantum information state corresponding to the neural code quiescent and firing, , can be represented in the two dimensional complex Hilbert space (qubit space). At a concrete instant of time neuron’s state can be mathematically described by superposition of two states, labeled by ,: . It is assumed that these states are orthogonal and normalized, i.e., and, . The coordinates and with respect to the quiescent-firing basis are complex amplitudes representing potentialities for the neuron to be quiescent or firing. Superposition represents uncertainty in action potential, “to fire” or “not to fire”. This superposition is quantum information representation of physical, electrochemical uncertainty.
Let be some psychological (cognitive) function realized by this neuron. (Of course, this is oversimplification, considered, e.g., in the paradigm “grandmother neuron”; see Section 11.3 for modeling of based on a neural network). We assume that is dichotomous. Say represents some instinct, e.g., aggression: “attack” , “not attack” .
A psychological function can represent answering to some question (or class of questions), solving problems, performing tasks. Mathematically is represented by the Hermitian operator that is diagonal in the basis ,. The neuron interacts with the surrounding electrochemical environment . This interaction generates the evolution of neuron’s state and realization of the psychological function . We model dynamics with the quantum master equation (24). Decoherence transforms the pure state into the classical statistical mixture (30), a steady state of this dynamics. This is resolution of the original electrochemical uncertainty in neuron’s action potential.
The diagonal elements of give the probabilities with the statistical interpretation: in a large ensemble of neurons (individually) interacting with the same environment , say neurons, , the number of neurons which take the decision equals to the diagonal element .
We also point to the advantage of the quantum-like dynamics of the interaction of a neuron with its environment — dynamics’ linearity implying exponential speed up of the process of neuron’s state evolution towards a “decision-matrix” given by a steady state (Section 8.4).
11. Compound biosystems
11.1. Entanglement of information states of biosystems
The state space of the biosystem consisting of the subsystems , is the tensor product of subsystems’ state spaces , so
* |
The easiest way to imagine this state space is to consider its coordinate representation with respect to some basis constructed with bases in . For simplicity, consider the case of qubit state spaces let , , be some orthonormal basis in , i.e., elements of this space are linear combinations of the form . (To be completely formal, we have to label basis vectors with the index , i.e.,. But we shall omit this it.) Then vectors form the orthonormal basis in , i.e., any state can be represented in the form
and the complex coordinates are normalized: . For example, if , we can consider the state
This is an example of an entangled state, i.e., a state that cannot be factorized in the tensor product of the states of the subsystems. An example of a non-entangled state (up to normalization) is given by
Entangled states are basic states for quantum computing that explores state’s inseparability. Acting to one concrete qubit modifies the whole state. For a separable state, by transforming say the first qubit, we change only the state of system . This possibility to change the very complex state of a compound system via change of the local state of a subsystem is considered as the root of superiority of quantum computation over classical one. We remark that the dimension of the tensor product state space is very big, it equals for qubit subsystems. In quantum physics, this possibility to manipulate with the compound state (that can have the big dimension) is typically associated with “quantum nonlocality” and spooky action at a distance.But, even in quantum physics this nonlocal interpretation is the source for permanent debates []. In particular, in the recent series of papers [] it was shown that it is possible to proceed without referring to quantum nonlocality and that quantum mechanics can be interpreted as the local physical theory. The local viewpoint on the quantum theory is more natural for biological application.13 For biosystems, spooky action at a distance is really mysterious; for humans, it corresponds to acceptance of parapsychological phenomena.
How can one explain generation of state-transformation of the compound system by “local transformation” of say the state of its subsystem ? Here the key-role is played by correlations that are symbolically encoded in entangled states. For example, consider the compound system in the state given by (33). Consider the projection-type observables on represented by Hermitian operators with eigen-vectors , (in qubit spaces ). Measurement of say with the output induces the state projection onto the vector .
Hence, measurement of will automatically produce the output . Thus, the state encodes the exact correlations for these two observables. In the same way, the state
encodes correlations , (mod 2).
So, 'an entangled state provides the symbolic representation of correlations between states of the subsystems of a compound biosystem'
Theory of open quantum systems operates with mixed states described by density operators. And before to turn to modeling of biological functions for compound systems, we define entanglement for mixed states. Consider the case of tensor product of two Hilbert spaces, i.e., the system is compound of two subsystems and . A mixed state of given by is called separable if it can be represented as a convex combination of product states , where , , are the density operator of the subsystem of . Non-separable states are called entangled. They symbolically represent correlations between subsystems.
Quantum dynamics describes the evolution of these correlations. In the framework of open system dynamics, a biological function approaches the steady state via the process of decoherence. As was discussed in Section 8.3, this dynamics resolves uncertainty that was initially present in the state of a biosystem; at the same time, it also washes out the correlations: the steady state which is diagonal in the basis is separable (disentagled). However, in the process of the state-evolution correlations between subsystems (entanglement) play the crucial role. Their presence leads to transformations of the state of the compound system via “local transformations” of the states of its subsystems. Such correlated dynamics of the global information state reflects consistency of the transformations of the states of subsystems.
Since the quantum-like approach is based on the quantum information representation of systems’ states, we can forget about the physical space location of biosystems and work in the information space given by complex Hilbert space . In this space, we can introduce the notion of locality based on the fixed tensor product decomposition (31). Operations in its components we can call local (in information space). But, they induce “informationally nonlocal” evolution of the state of the compound system.
11.2. Entanglement of genes’ epimutations
Now, we come back to the model presented in Section 9 and consider the information state of cell’s epigenome expressing potential epimutations of the chromatin-marking type. Let cell’s genome consists of genes . For each gene , consider all its possible epimutations and enumerate them: . The state of all potential epimutations in the gene is represented as superposition
In the ideal situation – epimutations of the genes are independent – the state of cell’s epigenome is mathematically described by the tensor product of the states :
However, in a living biosystem, the most of the genes and proteins are correlated forming a big network system. Therefore, one epimutation affects other genes. In the quantum information framework, this situation is described by entangled states:
This form of representation of potential epimutations in the genome of a cell implies that epimutation in one gene is consistent with epimutations in other genes. If the state is entangled (not factorized), then by acting, i.e., through change in the environment, to one gene, say , and inducing some epimutation in it, the cell “can induce” consistent epimutations in other genes.
Linearity of the quantum information representation of the biophysical processes in a cell induces the linear state dynamics. This makes the epigenetic evolution very rapid; the off-diagonal elements of the density matrix decrease exponentially quickly. Thus, our quantum-like model justifies the high speed of the epigenetic evolution. If it were based solely on the biophysical representation with nonlinear state dynamics, it would be essentially slower.
Modeling based on theory of open systems leads to reconsideration of interrelation between the Darwinian with Lamarckian viewpoint on evolution. Here we concentrated on epimutations, but in the same way we can model mutations (Asano et al., 2015b).
11.3. Psychological functions
Now, we turn to the model presented in Section 10. A neural network is modeled as a compound quantum system; its state is presented in tensor product of single-neuron state spaces. Brain’s functions perform self-measurements modeled within theory of open quantum systems. (There is no need to consider state’s collapse.) State’s dynamics of some brain’s function (psychological function) is described by the quantum master equation. Its steady states represent classical statistical mixtures of possible outputs of (decisions). Thus through interaction with electrochemical environment, (considered as an open system) resolves uncertainty that was originally encoded in entangled state representing uncertainties in action potentials of neurons and correlations between them.
Entanglement plays the crucial role in generating consistency in neurons’ dynamics. As in Section 11.1, suppose that the quantum information representation is based on 0–1 code. Consider a network of neurons interacting with the surrounding electrochemical environment , including signaling from other neural networks. The information state is given by (32). Entanglement encodes correlations between firing of individual neurons. For example, the state (33) is associated with two neurons firing synchronically and the state (34) with two neurons firing asynchronically.
Outputs of the psychological function based biophysically on a neural network are resulted from consistent state dynamics of individual neurons belonging to this network. As was already emphasized, state’s evolution toward a steady state is very rapid, as a consequence of linearity of the open system dynamics; the off-diagonal elements of the density matrix decrease exponentially quickly.
12. Concluding remarks
Since 1990th (Khrennikov, 1999), quantum-like modeling outside of physics, especially modeling of cognition and decision making, flowered worldwide. Quantum information theory (coupled to measurement and open quantum systems theories) is fertile ground for quantum-like flowers. The basic hypothesis presented in this paper is that functioning of biosystems is based on the quantum information representation of their states. This representation is the output of the biological evolution. The latter is considered as the evolution in the information space. So, biosystems react not only to material or energy constraints imposed by the environment, but also to the information constraints. In this paper, biological functions are considered as open information systems interacting with information environment.
The quantum-like representation of information provides the possibility to process superpositions. This way of information processing is advantageous as saving computational resources: a biological function need not to resolve uncertainties encoded in superpositions and to calculate JPDs of all compatible variables involved in the performance of .
Another advantageous feature of quantum-like information processing is its linearity. Transition from nonlinear dynamics of electrochemical states to linear quantum-like dynamics tremendously speeds up state-processing (for gene-expression, epimutations, and generally decision making). In this framework, decision makers are genes, proteins, cells, brains, ecological systems.
Biological functions developed the ability to perform self-measurements, to generate outputs of their functioning. We model this ability in the framework of open quantum systems, as decision making through decoherence. We emphasize that this model is free from the ambiguous notion of collapse of the wave function.
Correlations inside a biological function as well as between different biological functions and environment are represented linearly by entangled quantum states.
We hope that this paper would be useful for biologists (especially working on mathematical modeling) as an introduction to the quantum-like approach to model functioning of biosystems. We also hope that it can attract attention of experts in quantum information theory to the possibility to use its formalism and methodology in biological studies.
Declaration of Competing Interest
The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
Acknowledgments
This work was partially supported by JSPS, Japan KAKENHI, Nos. 26247016and 17K19970. M.O. acknowledges the support of the IRI-NU collaboration, Japan .
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