Thermodynamic Depth of Causal States: When Paddling Around in Occam's Pool Shallowness Is a Virtue
Thermodynamic depth is an appealing but flawed complexity measure. It depends on a set of macroscopic states for a system, but neither its original introduction by Lloyd and Pagels nor any follow-up work has considered how to select these states. Depth, therefore, is at root subjective. Computational mechanics provides a definition for a system'[s minimal, necessary causal states and a procedure for finding them. We show that the rate of increase in thermodynamic depth, or "dive," is the system's reverse-time Shannon entropy rate, and so depth only measures degrees of macroscopic randomness, not structure. We redefine the depth in terms of the causal state representation--- epsilon-machines---and show that this representation gives the minimum dive consistent with accurate predition. Thus, epsilon-machines are optimally shallow.
Year of publication: |
1998-06
|
---|---|
Authors: | Crutchfield, James P. ; Shalizi, Cosma Rohilla |
Institutions: | Santa Fe Institute |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Upper Bound on the Products of Particle Interactions in Cellular Automata
Hordijk, Wim, (2000)
-
Pattern Discovery and Computational Mechanics
Shalizi, Cosma Rohilla, (2000)
-
Shalizi, Cosma Rohilla, (2000)
- More ...