How do constraints affect the behaviour of a complex system?

Lead Research Organisation: Imperial College London
Department Name: Physics

Abstract

In a system consisting of simple agents, how do constraints affect the emergent macroscopic behaviours? In nature, there are many examples of emergent behaviour in complex systems, for example, the Gutenberg-Richter law of earthquakes, the power-law behaviour of price fluctuations, the connectivity of social networks etc. However, these complex systems are finite in size. How does the finiteness of these systems perturb the inherent (ideal) behaviour that one would observe in an infinite system? Can one extract the scaling behaviour of the perturbation from finite systems that would eventually allow one to extrapolate to the infinite system? The notion of finite-size scaling in critical systems is one such example, but in a limited domain. Another related question is whether smaller systems are inherently more predictable due to the constraints. If yes, can one exploit this increased predictability to extrapolate the predictability of larger systems? These investigations are first pursued in simplified complex systems. TheResearch Area: Complexity Science

Research Area: Complexity Science

Strategic Area: Mathematical Sciences & Physical Sciences

Publications

10 25 50

Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
EP/N509486/1 01/10/2016 31/03/2022
1992401 Studentship EP/N509486/1 01/10/2017 30/09/2021 Max Falkenberg Mcgillivray
 
Description New theories for the cause of certain cardiac arrhythmia with proposals on how to improve treatment.
Complementary work studying constraints in network analysis. Potential to shift paradigm and change dominant methods in the field.
Exploitation Route Theoretical models which may lead to new diagnostic methods in cardiology.
Conceptual challenge to current paradigm in network analysis which may lead to more robust analysis methods.
Sectors Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software),Healthcare,Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology

 
Description BHF ElectroCardioMaths Group 
Organisation Imperial College London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Physics subgroup of the BHF funded ElectroCardioMaths group applying physics approaches to problems in cardiac electrophysiology.
Collaborator Contribution See outcomes below
Impact 2 Publications 1 Conference Paper 2 Working Papers 1 Patent Pending
Start Year 2014
 
Description University of Auckland Bioengineering Department 
Organisation University of Auckland
Department Auckland Bioengineering Institute (ABI)
Country New Zealand 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Theoretical modeling using Auckland Data.
Collaborator Contribution Data acquisition and processing.
Impact Paper under review
Start Year 2019