Abstract This study proposes a reformulation of the observer’s role in quantum measurement by introducing an informational structural parameter ϕ, referred to as observerhood (SOP). Within this framework, the measurement problem is reframed not as a causal question—“why does collapse occur? ”—but as a structural one: “why does this informational structure stabilize coherently? ” The observer is modeled as an informational agent characterized by an exponential-family state ρ_ϕ defined over a set of measurable operators Aᵢ. The informational consistency between the quantum state ρ and the observer’s structure ϕ is quantified by the quantum relative entropy C (ρ, ϕ) = −S (ρ || ρ_ϕ). The gradient flow of this function yields a non-unitary informational update process of the observer's structure. In a spin-½ system, the stationary distribution μₑq (ϕ) reconstructs the Born rule in the low-informational-temperature limit. While this theory does not claim new empirical predictions, it reconstructs measurement as a dual process of external decoherence and internal consistency, providing a structural foundation that unifies decoherence theory, relational quantum mechanics, and informational structural realism.
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Yamamoto Takayuki
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Yamamoto Takayuki (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/692502ad87af00ed34ac1d1a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17583686