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Parent Node(s):
ERGODIC
(l) of or relating to a process in which a sequence or
sizable sample is equally representative of the whole (as in
regard to a statistical parameter); (2) involving or relating to
the probability that any state will recur, especially having zero
probability that any state will never recur. (WEBSTER'S
DICTIONARY)
A collection of systems forms an ergodic ensemble if
the modes of behavior found in any one system from time to time
resemble its behavior at other temporal periods and if the
behavior of any other system when chosen at random also is like
the one system. We do not require identical performance, only
quite similar time averages and number averages. (If you cannot
tell one youth from another or one adult from another, they
belong to an ergodic ensemble.) In an ergodic population, any
single individual is representative of the entire population.
The salient characteristics of this individual are essentially
identical with any other member of the group. (Iberall)
Attribute of a behavior that involves only equilibrium states and whose transition probabilities either are unvarying or follow a definite cycle. In statistics, ergodicity is called stationarity and tested by comparing the transition probabilities or different parts of a longer sequence of events. Ashby's "theory of incessant transmission" refers to the analysis of information flows in systems whose transition probabilities are unvarying and hence ascertainable for the analysis. All systems eventually converge toward ergodic behavior (see NON-ERGODIC). (Krippendorff)
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