Quantum Software Consortium

Quantum Information Processing conference 2025

The next edition of the QIP conference will be held in Raleigh, North Carolina, hosted by Duke University and NC State University. The conference will be held from 22 to 28 February 2025, with a preceeding workshop on 22 and 23 February. QIP 2025 (https://rsvp.duke.edu/event/qip2025/summary)

QIP 2025 Durham, NC

 

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

We invite contributions, both for talks and posters, on outstanding recent research in the theory of quantum information and computation. A QIP Best Student Paper prize will be awarded.

IMPORTANT DATES

Talk submission deadline: October 4, 2024 (AoE)
Early poster-only submission deadline: November 4, 2024 (AoE)
Early poster-only notification: November 18, 2024.
Decision notification (talks and posters): December 7, 2024.

Please apply for travel visas well in advance of the conference.

 



BEST STUDENT PAPER PRIZE

A submission is eligible for the Best Student Paper prize if and only if the main author(s) is/are a student(s) at the time of the submission and will present the work at QIP, and further a significant portion of the work
(at least 60%) has been done by said student(s), including contributing the majority of the key ideas. Eligibility can only be indicated at the time of submission. The PC chair is free to ask for any clarifications regarding
the students' contributions at any time.

INSTRUCTIONS FOR TALK SUBMISSIONS

All submissions must be made electronically through the online submission system HotCRP.

Contributed talks at QIP are intended to be representative of outstanding recent research contributions to the theory of quantum information and computation. In addition to a title and a short abstract (for the conference website in case of acceptance), each submission to QIP for a talk should consist of the following two components.

Extended abstract: Extended abstracts should be 1 to 3 pages in length. They should contain a nontechnical, clear, and insightful description of the results and main ideas, their potential impact, and their importance to
quantum information and computation.  Extended abstracts should not be a compressed version of a full paper, but instead should facilitate an intuitive understanding of the research results that they represent and
help the Program Committee assess their importance.  The submission should highlight new conceptual contributions and make the ideas involved as broadly accessible as possible.  Extended abstracts should be in PDF format and typeset in single-column form with reasonable margins and font size at least 11 points. The page maximum does not include references. Authors who submitted (even part) of the work to any previous QIP should clarify what is the difference compared to their earlier submission on the first page of the extended abstract.  As the scope of the conference is recent work, resubmissions will typically be rejected unless they involve major
improvements over previous submission.

Technical Manuscript: This is a full paper describing the work, including technical details. This manuscript may be from an on-line repository, such as arXiv; however, a PDF copy of it must be uploaded. If your submission
consists of multiple technical papers they should be merged into a single file. Submissions whose technical manuscript is publicly available will be preferred. Public availability of the technical version a month after the
submission deadline will factor in the Program Committee's choice of accepted talks.

The Program Committee reserves the right to decide how to treat submissions that deviate from the above format, including rejection of submissions solely on the basis of their format.

Submissions not accepted as a talk will automatically be considered as a poster.

An author can contact the Program Committee chair or co-chairs directly if he or she has a serious and substantive conflict of interest with an individual who is likely to be asked to serve as a subreviewer for the paper. This has to be done immediately after the submission, and should include a detailed justification.

 



INSTRUCTIONS FOR POSTER-ONLY SUBMISSIONS

Poster submissions should be made using the same submission system as talk submissions. For poster-only submissions, only a title and abstract are required (i.e., an extended abstract is not needed). A technical manuscript
can be attached. Please indicate in the required field "presenter" the person that will present the poster at the conference. 

HotCRP INSTRUCTIONS

The submission server is now accepting submissions. For regular submissions, go to https://qip2025.hotcrp.com/  For poster-only submissions, go to the same  address and click on the corresponding link to proceed to the poster-only submission site. Then log in (or create an account if you have not used HotCRP before) and follow the instructions to create a submission. Please check the box for Best Student Paper Prize only
if all co-authors of this submission are aware of the eligibility criteria of the prize and actually support the choice. Authors are also required to choose exactly one topic among the following list: cryptography, information theory, foundations, many-body systems, algorithms, error correction, tomography and learning, complexity, and other topics in quantum computing. Note that this is only to facilitate internal coordination of the reviewing process, as the number of submissions continues to grow. QIP remains a single-submission-track conference, and
the reviewing will not be divided into separate tracks with separate panels.

You may update or withdraw submissions up until the deadline; only the latest version will be reviewed. Submissions will be automatically closed immediately after the deadline, so early submissions are encouraged.



RESUBMISSION TO CONFERENCES WITH A SIMILAR SCOPE

We aim to ensure the broadest selection of talks at all conferences in our field. In light of the large volume of high-quality research being produced and the low acceptance rates at recent editions of QIP, submissions that
have already been presented at another conference of a similar scope to QIP (e.g., TQC) are discouraged.

Program Committee Chair: Robert Koenig (Technical University of Munich (TUM))
Program Committee co-Chairs: Michael Wolf (TUM) and Ángela Capel (University of Cambridge, UK)

Program Committee:
Scott Aaronson (University of Texas)
Gorjan Alagic (University of Maryland)
Alvaro Alhambra (Spanish National Research Council)
Anurag Anshu (Harvard)
Simon Apers (CNRS, Université Paris Cité, IRIF)
Srinivasan Arunachalam (IBM Quantum)
Ryan Babbush (Google)
Michael Ben-Or (Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
Michael Beverland (IBM)
Andreas Bluhm (Université Grenoble Alpes)
Sergey Bravyi (IBM)
Francesco Buscemi (University of Nagoya)
Ángela Capel (co-chair) (University of Cambridge)
Matthias C. Caro (University of Warwick & Freie Universität Berlin)
Ulysse Chabaud (INRIA)
Hao-Chung Cheng (National Taiwan University)
Giulio Chiribella (QICI University of Hong Kong)
Anirban Chowdhury (IBM)
Nicolas Delfosse (IonQ)
Eleni Diamanti (CNRS & Sorbonne University)
Frederic Dupuis (Université de Montréal)
Di Fang (Duke University)
Bill Fefferman (University of Chicago)
Lukasz Fidkowski (University of Washington)
Sevag Gharibian (Universität Paderborn)
Uma Girish (Columbia University)
Jeongwan Haah (Microsoft / Stanford)
Jonas Haferkamp (Harvard)
Peter Høyer (University of Calgary)
Min Hsiu Hsieh (Foxconn)
Felix Huber (Université de Bordeaux)
Zhengfeng Ji (Tsinghua University)
Liang Jiang (University of Chicago)
Stephen Jordan (Google)
Elham Kashefi (University of Edinburgh & CNRS - Sorbonne Université)
Michael Kastoryano (University of Copenhagen & AWS)
Kohtaro Kato (Nagoya University)
Iordanis Kerenidis (CNRS - Université Paris Cité)
Shelby Kimmel (Middlebury College)
Martin Kliesch (Hamburg University of Technology)
Robert Koenig (chair) (Technical University of Munich)
Tamara Kohler (Stanford)
Richard Kueng (Johannes Kepler Universität Linz)
François Le Gall (Nagoya University)
Soojoon Lee (Kyung Hee University)
Anthony Leverrier (INRIA)
Lin Lin (UC Berkeley)
Fermi Ma (UC Berkeley)
Laura Mančinska (University of Copenhagen)
Damian Markham (Sorbonne Université)
Dmitri Maslov (Google)
Antonio Anna Mele (Freie Universität Berlin)
Johannes Jakob Meyer (Freie Universität Berlin)
Tomoyuki Morimae (Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics)
Hamoon Mousavi (UC Berkeley)
Markus Mülller (Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information,
Vienna)
Anand Natarajan (MIT)
Hui Khoon Ng (National University of Singapore)
Yingkai Ouyang (University of Sheffield)
Subhasree Patro (Eindhoven University of Technology & CWI)
Saleh Rahimi-Keshari (Institute for Research in Fundamental Sciences)
Daniel Ranard (Caltech)
Bartosz Regula (RIKEN)
Joseph M. Renes (ETH Zurich)
Marc-Olivier Renou (INRIA)
Robert Salzmann (École normale supérieure de Lyon)
Changpeng Shao (Academy of Mathematics and Systems Science, Chinese Academy
of Sciences)
Mehdi Soleimanifar (Caltech)
Alexander Stottmeister (Universität Hannover)
David Sutter (IBM)
Mario Szegedy (Rutgers University)
Ryuji Takagi (University of Tokyo)
Eugene Tang (Northeastern University)
Nathanan Tantivasadakarn (Caltech)
Marco Tomamichel (National University of Singapore)
Rahul Trivedi (Max-Planck-Institut für Quantenoptik)
Peter Vrana (Budapest University of Technology and Economics)
Yuxin Wang (University of Maryland)
Xin Wang (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology - Guangzhou)
Albert H. Werner (University of Copenhagen)
Dominik Wild (Max-Planck-Institut für Quantenoptik)
Ramona Wolf (Universität Siegen)
Michael Wolf (co-chair) (Technical University of Munich)
Ronald de Wolf (QuSoft, CWI & University of Amsterdam)
John Wright (UC Berkeley)
Hayata Yamasaki (University of Tokyo)
Penghui Yao (Nanjing University)
Bei Zeng (University of Texas at Dallas)
Shengyu Zhang (Tencent)
Sisi Zhou (Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics)
Zoltan Zimboras (Wigner Research Center for Physics)

 

Details
When: Saturday February 22nd, 2025  -  Friday February 28th, 2025
Where: Raleigh, North Carolina, USA