The emergence of scaling behavior in complex systems has been at the
 cornerstone of complexity science since its very beginning.
 Particularly striking is the ubiquity of the so-called "Zipf's Law", a
 statistical pattern observed in many different systems, from economy
 to human language. In this talk we explore how fundamental assumptions
 of complexity and evolution under order/disorder tensions naturally
 lead to the emergence of this scaling behavior. This model-free,
 general approach provides an intuitive and elegant explanation of the
 emergence of such scaling behavior and its ubituity. We will close the
 talk by showing how G.K. Zipf's hypothesis to explain the emergence of
 such statistical pattern in complex communication can be properly
 formalized using the presented theoretical apparatus, thereby
 demonstrating that his conjecture was right.
References: Universality of Zipf's law. Bernat Corominas-Murtra and Ricard V.
 Solé. Physical Review E 82, 11102 (2010);
Emergence of Zipf’s Law in the Evolution of Communication. Bernat
 Corominas-Murtra, Jordi Fortuny and Ricard V. Solé. Physical Review E
 83, 32767 (2011)
                
              
              
              
              
              
                
              
Detalls de contacte:
Ernesto M. Nicola Contact form