Entropy 2021 (23):1104-1120 (
2021)
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Abstract
Contextuality and entanglement are valuable resources for quantum computing and
quantum information. Bell inequalities are used to certify entanglement; thus, it is important to
understand why and how they are violated. Quantum mechanics and behavioural sciences teach us
that random variables ‘measuring’ the same content (the answer to the same Yes or No question)
may vary, if ‘measured’ jointly with other random variables. Alice’s and Bob’s raw data confirm
Einsteinian non-signaling, but setting dependent experimental protocols are used to create samples
of coupled pairs of distant ±1 outcomes and to estimate correlations.Marginal expectations, estimated
using these final samples, depend on distant settings. Therefore,a system of random variables
‘measured’ in Bell tests is inconsistently connected and it should be analyzed using a Contextuality-
by-Default approach, what is done for the first time in this paper.The violation of Bell inequalities
and inconsistent connectedness may be explained using a contextual locally causal probabilistic
model in which setting dependent variables describing measuring instruments are correctly
incorporated. We prove that this model does not restrict experimenters` freedom of choice
which is a prerequisite of science. Contextuality seems to be the rule and not an exception; thus, it
should be carefully tested.