Burstiness and memory in complex systems

The dynamics of a wide range of real systems, from email patterns to earthquakes, display a bursty, intermittent nature, characterized by short timeframes of intense activity followed by long times of no or reduced activity. The understanding of the origin of such bursty patterns is hindered by the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEurophysics letters Vol. 81; no. 4; pp. 48002 - pl/48002-p5
Main Authors Goh, K.-I, Barabási, A.-L
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published IOP Publishing 01.02.2008
EDP Sciences
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Summary:The dynamics of a wide range of real systems, from email patterns to earthquakes, display a bursty, intermittent nature, characterized by short timeframes of intense activity followed by long times of no or reduced activity. The understanding of the origin of such bursty patterns is hindered by the lack of tools to compare different systems using a common framework. Here we propose to characterize the bursty nature of real signals using orthogonal measures quantifying two distinct mechanisms leading to burstiness: the interevent time distribution and the memory. We find that while the burstiness of natural phenomena is rooted in both the interevent time distribution and memory, for human dynamics memory is weak, and the bursty character is due to the changes in the interevent time distribution. Finally, we show that current models lack in their ability to reproduce the activity pattern observed in real systems, opening up avenues for future work.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/80W-KCDNGRZS-S
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publisher-ID:epl10723
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content type line 23
ISSN:0295-5075
1286-4854
DOI:10.1209/0295-5075/81/48002