Abstract

Size varies. Small things are typically more frequent than large things. The logarithm of frequency often declines linearly with the logarithm of size. That power law relation forms one of the common patterns of nature. Why does the complexity of nature reduce to such a simple pattern? Why do things as different as tree size and enzyme rate follow similarly simple patterns? Here I analyze such patterns by their invariant properties. For example, a common pattern should not change when adding a constant value to all observations. That shift is essentially the renumbering of the points on a ruler without changing the metric information provided by the ruler. A ruler is shift invariant only when its scale is properly calibrated to the pattern being measured. Stretch invariance corresponds to the conservation of the total amount of something, such as the total biomass and consequently the average size. Rotational invariance corresponds to pattern that does not depend on the order in which underlying processes occur, for example, a scale that additively combines the component processes leading to observed values. I use tree size as an example to illustrate how the key invariances shape pattern. A simple interpretation of common pattern follows. That simple interpretation connects the normal distribution to a wide variety of other common patterns through the transformations of scale set by the fundamental invariances.

Highlights

  • The size of trees follows a simple pattern

  • If we shift Tz so that it is expressed as a deviation from its minimum value, for many natural metrics, Tz, the probability pattern in equation 8 is a normal distribution with respect to the incremental scale d Tz = dRz

  • Once we find the proper scaling through the natural metric, we can think of an observed probability pattern an an expression of the normal form on a different scale

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Summary

Introduction

The size of trees follows a simple pattern. Small trees are more frequent than large trees. If we shift Tz so that it is expressed as a deviation from its minimum value, for many natural metrics, Tz, the probability pattern in equation 8 is a normal distribution with respect to the incremental scale d Tz = dRz. The distribution is centered at the minimum of Tz and has average distance of fluctuations from the central location as the generalized variance, σ 2. The proper way to relate general growth processes to invariant probability patterns remains an open problem

Conclusion
Jaynes ET: Probability Theory
11. Harte J
Frank SA

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