We investigate the performance of discrimination strategy in the comparison
task of known quantum states. In the discrimination strategy, one infers
whether or not two quantum systems are in the same state on the basis of the
outcomes of separate discrimination measurements on each system. In some cases
with more than two possible states, the optimal strategy in minimum-error
comparison is that one should infer the two systems are in different states
without any measurement, implying that the discrimination strategy performs
worse than the trivial "no-measurement" strategy. We present a sufficient
condition for this phenomenon to happen. For two pure states with equal prior
probabilities, we determine the optimal comparison success probability with an
error margin, which interpolates the minimum-error and unambiguous comparison.
We find that the discrimination strategy is not optimal except for the
minimum-error case.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, minor corrections made, final versio