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Randomization can improve quantum computer performance in presence of noise

New research led by a graduating Ph. D. student in The University of New Mexico Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering has shown that randomization can improve quantum computer performance in the presence of noise.

1 Left1 Center0 Right
Needs review. This source map is too narrow, too early, or mixed-format to trust yet.

NEEDS REVIEW

As of May 25, 2026 at 7:20 PM, this is how Optics News reads the wording differences in this story.

What happened Randomization can improve quantum computer performance in presence of noise.
The headline split This source map appears to mix related topics or outlier articles, so Optics should not treat it as a clean same-event wording gap yet.
Match confidence Developing. Only 2 sources are matched, and the source map is still narrow. Useful to watch, not enough to draw conclusions yet.
Same-event confidenceDeveloping

The strongest left and right headlines share no substantive overlap.

Wording differs, but the match is too narrow to read confidently yet.

WHAT EACH SIDE EMPHASIZED

Left / center-leftUS's big bet on quantum computing may not be entirely legal

Ars Technica · Center-left · News report

CenterRandomization can improve quantum computer performance in presence of noise

Phys.org · Center · News report

Right / center-rightNo matching source in this bucket yet.

Optics keeps watching for pickup.

SEE THE HEADLINES

C · CenterHigh
Phys.orgNews report · May 25, 7:20 PM

Randomization can improve quantum computer performance in presence of noise

randomizationimprovecomputerperformance

New research led by a graduating Ph. D. student in The University of New Mexico Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering has shown that randomization can improve quantum computer p...

Open source
CL · Center-leftHigh
Ars TechnicaNews report · May 25, 12:00 PM

US's big bet on quantum computing may not be entirely legal

computing

Deal also launched the first quantum foundry company, but is there a need for it?

Open source
DetailsScore hidden · 2 sources · 2 bias buckets
Score hidden until the match is cleanerNeeds review confidence2 sources · 2 bias bucketsNeeds review · outlier detectedFormats: News report

SOURCE MAP CHANGES

May 25, 12:00 PM: Ars Technica joined the source map.

May 25, 7:20 PM: Phys.org joined the source map.

Now: score hidden until the source match is cleaner. Story health is needs review · outlier detected.