Okamoto Hiroshi, Yoshimoto Iku, Kato Sota, Ahsan Budrul, Shinohara Shuji
Department of Bioengineering, School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Advanced Social and International Studies, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
Sci Rep. 2023 Dec 19;13(1):22686. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-50002-w.
War is an extreme form of collective human behaviour characterized by coordinated violence. We show that this nature of war is substantiated in the temporal patterns of conflict occurrence that obey power law. The focal metric is the interconflict interval (ICI), the interval between the end of a conflict in a dyad (i.e. a pair of states) and the start of the subsequent conflict in the same dyad. Using elaborate statistical tests, we confirmed that ICI samples compiled from the history of interstate conflicts from 1816 to 2014 followed a power-law distribution. We then demonstrate that the power-law properties of ICIs can be explained by a hypothetical model assuming an information-theoretic formulation of the Clausewitz thesis on war: the use of force is a means of interstate communication. Our findings help us to understand the nature of wars between regular states, the significance of which has increased since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
战争是人类集体行为的一种极端形式,其特点是协同暴力。我们表明,战争的这种性质在遵循幂律的冲突发生时间模式中得到了证实。核心指标是冲突间隔时间(ICI),即二元组(即一对国家)中一场冲突的结束与同一二元组中随后冲突的开始之间的间隔。通过精心设计的统计测试,我们证实,从1816年至2014年的国际冲突历史中汇编的ICI样本遵循幂律分布。然后,我们证明,ICI的幂律特性可以通过一个假设模型来解释,该模型假设了克劳塞维茨战争理论的信息论表述:使用武力是国家间交流的一种手段。我们的研究结果有助于我们理解正规国家之间战争的本质,自2022年俄罗斯入侵乌克兰以来,这种战争的重要性有所增加。