Abstract

The intermittency of a time-series, i.e. the extent to which it departs from slowly-varying, unifractal dynamics, can often be quantified by simple scale-free statistics. For fractal point processes, singular measures, and certain other models that describe physical and biological phenomena, the correlation co-dimension, C2, quantifies intermittency. C2 of human activity during the night quantifies restfulness in that it is negatively correlated with the average activity level. However, C2 of activity appears to be more sensitive to the use of steroids than the average activity level.

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