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Piotr Mironowicz

Piotr Mironowicz contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

7 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

From World-Gen to Quest-Line: A Dependency-Driven Prompt Pipeline for Coherent RPG Generation

Large Language Models (LLMs) have shown strong potential for narrative generation, but their use in complex, multi-layered role-playing game (RPG) worlds is still limited by issues of coherence, controllability, and structural consistency. This paper explores a dependency-aware, multi-stage prompt pipeline for procedural RPG content generation that models narrative dependencies through structured intermediate representations. The approach decomposes generation into sequential stages: world building, non-player character creation, player character creation, campaign-level quest planning, and quest expansion. Each stage conditions on structured JSON outputs from previous stages. By enforcing schemas and explicit data flow, the pipeline reduces narrative drift, limits hallucinations, and supports scalable creation of interconnected narrative elements. The system is evaluated qualitatively through human-centered analysis across multiple independent runs. Outputs are assessed using criteria such as structural completeness, internal consistency, narrative coherence, diversity, and actionability. Results show that the pipeline consistently generates logically sound and structurally valid RPG content, without quality degradation as complexity increases. Separating high-level campaign planning from detailed quest expansion improves both global structure and local storytelling. These findings suggest that dependency-aware prompt pipelines with structured intermediate representations are an effective design pattern for LLM-based procedural content generation. This approach may also generalize to other domains requiring sequential reasoning over evolving contextual states.

preprint2024arXiv

Optimization of experimental quantum randomness expansion

Quantum technologies provide many applications for information processing tasks that are impossible to realize within classical physics. These capabilities include such fundamental resources as generating secure, i.e. private and unpredictable random values. Yet, the problem of quantifying the amount of generated randomness is still not fully solved. This work presents a comprehensive analysis of the design and performance optimization of a Quantum Random Number Generator (QRNG) based on Bell inequality violations. We investigate key protocol parameters, including the smoothing parameter ($ε_{\text{s}}$), test round probability ($γ$), and switching delays, and their effects on the generation rate and quality of randomness. We identify optimal ranges for $γ$ and $p_Ω$ (the protocol's non-aborting probability) to balance the trade-off between randomness consumption and net randomness generation. Additionally, we explore the impact of switching delays on the system's performance, providing strategies to mitigate these effects. Our results indicate substantial developments in QRNG implementations and offer higher randomness expansion rates. The work provides practical guidelines for the efficient and secure design of QRNG systems and other cryptographic protocols.

preprint2023arXiv

Experimental certification of more than one bit of quantum randomness in the two inputs and two outputs scenario

One of the striking properties of quantum mechanics is the occurrence of the Bell-type non-locality. They are a fundamental feature of the theory that allows two parties that share an entangled quantum system to observe correlations stronger than possible in classical physics. In addition to their theoretical significance, non-local correlations have practical applications, such as device-independent randomness generation, providing private unpredictable numbers even when they are obtained using devices derived by an untrusted vendor. Thus, determining the quantity of certifiable randomness that can be produced using a specific set of non-local correlations is of significant interest. In this paper, we present an experimental realization of recent Bell-type operators designed to provide private random numbers that are secure against adversaries with quantum resources. We use semi-definite programming to provide lower bounds on the generated randomness in terms of both min-entropy and von Neumann entropy in a device-independent scenario. We compare experimental setups providing Bell violations close to the Tsirelson's bound with lower rates of events, with setups having slightly worse levels of violation but higher event rates. Our results demonstrate the first experiment that certifies close to two bits of randomness from binary measurements of two parties.

preprint2022arXiv

Non-perfect propagation of information to noisy environment with self-evolution

We study the non-perfect propagation of information to evolving low-dimensional environment that includes self-evolution as well as noisy initial states and analyze interrelations between the degree of objectivization and environment parameters. In particular, we consider an analytical model of three interacting qubits and derive its objectivity parameters. The numerical analysis shows that the quality of the spectrum broadcast structure formed during the interaction may exhibit non-monotonicity both in the speed of self-dynamics of the environment as well as its mixedness. The former effect is particularly strong, showing that -- considering part of the environment as a measurement apparatus -- an increase of the external magnetic field acting on the environment may turn the very vague measurement into close to ideal. The above effects suggest that quantum objectivity may appear after increasing the dynamics of the environment, although not with respect to the pointer basis, but some other one which we call generalized pointer or indicator basis. Furthermore, it seems also that when the objectivity is poor it may be improved, at least by some amount, by increasing thermal noise. We provide further evidence of that by analyzing the upper bounds on distance to the set of states representing perfect objectivity in the case of a higher number of qubits.

preprint2021arXiv

Blurred quantum Darwinism across quantum reference frames

Quantum Darwinism describes objectivity of quantum systems via their correlations with their environment--information that hypothetical observers can recover by measuring the environments. However, observations are done with respect to a frame of reference. Here, we take the formalism of [Giacomini, Castro-Ruiz, & Brukner. Nat Commun 10, 494 (2019)], and consider the repercussions on objectivity when changing quantum reference frames. We find that objectivity depends on non-degenerative relative separations, conditional state localisation, and environment macro-fractions. There is different objective information in different reference frames due to the interchangeability of entanglement and coherence, and of statistical mixing and classical correlations. As such, objectivity is subjective across quantum reference frames.

preprint2020arXiv

Experimental certification of an informationally complete quantum measurement in a device-independent protocol

Minimal informationally complete positive operator-valued measures (MIC-POVMs) are special kinds of measurement in quantum theory in which the statistics of their $d^2$-outcomes are enough to reconstruct any $d$-dimensional quantum state. For this reason, MIC-POVMs are referred to as standard measurements for quantum information. Here, we report an experiment with entangled photon pairs that certifies, for what we believe is the first time, a MIC-POVM for qubits following a device-independent protocol (i.e., modeling the state preparation and the measurement devices as black boxes, and using only the statistics of the inputs and outputs). Our certification is achieved under the assumption of freedom of choice, no communication, and fair sampling.

preprint2020arXiv

Quantum randomness protected against detection loophole attacks

Device and semi-device independent quantum randomness generators (DI- and SDI-QRNGs) are crucial for applications requiring private randomness. However, they are vulnerable to detection inefficiency attacks and this limits severely their usage for practical purposes. Here, we present a method for protecting SDI-QRNGs in prepare-and-measure scenarios against detection inefficiency attacks. The key idea is the introduction of a blocking device that adds failures in the communication between the preparation and measurement devices. We prove that, for any detection efficiency, there is a blocking rate that provides protection against these attacks. We experimentally demonstrate the generation of private randomness using weak coherent states and standard avalanche photo-detectors.