Allotaxonometry and rank-turbulence divergence: A universal instrument for comparing complex systems
Complex systems often comprise many kinds of components which vary over many orders of magnitude in size: Populations of cities in countries, individual and corporate wealth in economies, species abundance in ecologies, word frequency in natural language, and node degree in complex networks. Here, w...
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Zusammenfassung: | Complex systems often comprise many kinds of components which vary over many
orders of magnitude in size: Populations of cities in countries, individual and
corporate wealth in economies, species abundance in ecologies, word frequency
in natural language, and node degree in complex networks. Here, we introduce
`allotaxonometry' along with `rank-turbulence divergence' (RTD), a tunable
instrument for comparing any two ranked lists of components. We analytically
develop our rank-based divergence in a series of steps, and then establish a
rank-based allotaxonograph which pairs a map-like histogram for rank-rank pairs
with an ordered list of components according to divergence contribution. We
explore the performance of rank-turbulence divergence, which we view as an
instrument of `type calculus', for a series of distinct settings including:
Language use on Twitter and in books, species abundance, baby name popularity,
market capitalization, performance in sports, mortality causes, and job titles.
We provide a series of supplementary flipbooks which demonstrate the tunability
and storytelling power of rank-based allotaxonometry. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2002.09770 |