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Abstract
As quantum technology matures, the efficient benchmarking of quantum devices remains a key challenge. Although sample-efficient, information-theoretic benchmarking techniques have recently been proposed, there is still a gap in adapting these techniques to contemporary experiments. In this work, we re-formulate five of the most common randomized benchmarking techniques in the modern language of the gate-set shadow tomography. This reformulation brings along several concrete advantages over conventional formulations of randomized benchmarking. For standard and interleaved randomized benchmarking, we can reduce the required gate-set size and, using median-of-means estimators, also reduce the required experimental sample size. For simultaneous and correlated randomized benchmarking, we can additionally reconstruct the Pauli-terms of correlated noise channels using additional post-processing of only a single experimental dataset. We also present a minimal approach to extract leakage errors. Our work provides a clear avenue for comprehensive, reliable, and convenient benchmarking of quantum devices, with all methods formulated under a single umbrella technique that can be easily adapted to a range of experimental quantities and gate sets.