In accordance with the fact that quantum measurements are described in terms
of positive operator measures (POMs), we consider certain aspects of a
quantization scheme in which a classical variable f:R2→R is associated
with a unique positive operator measure (POM) Ef, which is not necessarily
projection valued. The motivation for such a scheme comes from the well-known
fact that due to the noise in a quantum measurement, the resulting outcome
distribution is given by a POM and cannot, in general, be described in terms of
a traditional observable, a selfadjoint operator. Accordingly, we notice that
the noiseless measurements are the ones which are determined by a selfadjoint
operator. The POM Ef in our quantization is defined through its moment
operators, which are required to be of the form Γ(fk), k∈N, with
Γ a fixed map from classical variables to Hilbert space operators. In
particular, we consider the quantization of classical \emph{questions}, that
is, functions f:R2→R taking only values 0 and 1. We compare two concrete
realizations of the map Γ in view of their ability to produce noiseless
measurements: one being the Weyl map, and the other defined by using phase
space probability distributions.Comment: 15 pages, submitted to Journal of Physics