Let $c>1$, and let $A$ denote the set $$ \Big\{ \lfloor n^c \rfloor, \quad 1 \leq n \leq N \Big\}. $$ Thus $A$ consists of the first $N$ elements of a so-called Piatetski-Shapiro sequence.
The additive energy $E(A)$ of $A$ is defined as the number of solutions $(a_1,a_2,a_3,a_4) \in A^4$ of the equation $a_1 - a_2 = a_3 -a_4$.
Question: Is there an upper bound for $E(A)$ known? In particular, is it true that $$ E(A) \ll N^{3 - \varepsilon} $$ for some (small) $\varepsilon>0$, as $N \to \infty$?
(The case $c \geq 2$ is quite easy, but how about the other values of $c$ in the range $(1,2)$? Note that for $c < 2$ the set $A$ is not necessarily convex.)