Noël Pierre-André, Brummitt Charles D, D'Souza Raissa M
Complexity Sciences Center, University of California, Davis, California 95616, USA and Department of Computer Science, University of California, Davis, California 95616, USA.
Complexity Sciences Center, University of California, Davis, California 95616, USA and Department of Mathematics, University of California, Davis, California 95616, USA.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys. 2014 Jan;89(1):012807. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevE.89.012807. Epub 2014 Jan 15.
The Bak-Tang-Wiesenfeld (BTW) sandpile process is an archetypal, stylized model of complex systems with a critical point as an attractor of their dynamics. This phenomenon, called self-organized criticality, appears to occur ubiquitously in both nature and technology. Initially introduced on the two-dimensional lattice, the BTW process has been studied on network structures with great analytical successes in the estimation of macroscopic quantities, such as the exponents of asymptotically power-law distributions. In this article, we take a microscopic perspective and study the inner workings of the process through both numerical and rigorous analysis. Our simulations reveal fundamental flaws in the assumptions of past phenomenological models, the same models that allowed accurate macroscopic predictions; we mathematically justify why universality may explain these past successes. Next, starting from scratch, we obtain microscopic understanding that enables mechanistic models; such models can, for example, distinguish a cascade's area from its size. In the special case of a 3-regular network, we use self-consistency arguments to obtain a zero-parameter mechanistic (bottom-up) approximation that reproduces nontrivial correlations observed in simulations and that allows the study of the BTW process on networks in regimes otherwise prohibitively costly to investigate. We then generalize some of these results to configuration model networks and explain how one could continue the generalization. The numerous tools and methods presented herein are known to enable studying the effects of controlling the BTW process and other self-organizing systems. More broadly, our use of multitype branching processes to capture information bouncing back and forth in a network could inspire analogous models of systems in which consequences spread in a bidirectional fashion.
巴克 - 唐 - 维森费尔德(BTW)沙堆过程是复杂系统的一个典型的、程式化模型,其动力学的吸引子是一个临界点。这种被称为自组织临界性的现象似乎在自然和技术领域普遍存在。BTW过程最初是在二维晶格上引入的,已经在网络结构上进行了研究,在估计宏观量(如渐近幂律分布的指数)方面取得了巨大的分析成功。在本文中,我们从微观角度出发,通过数值分析和严格分析来研究该过程的内部运作。我们的模拟揭示了过去现象学模型假设中的基本缺陷,而正是这些模型能够做出准确的宏观预测;我们从数学上证明了普遍性为何可以解释这些过去的成功。接下来,我们从头开始,获得了能够支持机理模型的微观理解;例如,这样的模型可以区分级联的区域和大小。在3 - 正则网络的特殊情况下,我们使用自洽论证来获得一个零参数的机理(自下而上)近似,该近似再现了模拟中观察到的非平凡相关性,并允许在其他情况下研究成本过高而难以研究的网络上的BTW过程。然后,我们将其中一些结果推广到配置模型网络,并解释了如何继续进行推广。本文介绍的众多工具和方法已知可用于研究控制BTW过程和其他自组织系统的效果。更广泛地说,我们使用多类型分支过程来捕捉网络中来回反弹的信息,这可能会激发类似的系统模型,其中后果以双向方式传播。