Three faces of entropy for complex systems: Information, thermodynamics, and the maximum entropy principle

Thurner, S., Corominas-Murtra, B., & Hanel, R. (2017). Three faces of entropy for complex systems: Information, thermodynamics, and the maximum entropy principle. Physical Review E 96 (3) 10.1103/PhysRevE.96.032124.

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Abstract

There are at least three distinct ways to conceptualize entropy: entropy as an extensive thermodynamic quantity of physical systems (Clausius, Boltzmann, Gibbs), entropy as a measure for information production of ergodic sources (Shannon), and entropy as a means for statistical inference on multinomial processes (Jaynes maximum entropy principle). Even though these notions represent fundamentally different concepts, the functional form of the entropy for thermodynamic systems in equilibrium, for ergodic sources in information theory, and for independent sampling processes in statistical systems, is degenerate, H(p)=−∑ipilogpi. For many complex systems, which are typically history-dependent, nonergodic, and nonmultinomial, this is no longer the case. Here we show that for such processes, the three entropy concepts lead to different functional forms of entropy, which we will refer to as SEXT for extensive entropy, SIT for the source information rate in information theory, and SMEP for the entropy functional that appears in the so-called maximum entropy principle, which characterizes the most likely observable distribution functions of a system. We explicitly compute these three entropy functionals for three concrete examples: for Pólya urn processes, which are simple self-reinforcing processes, for sample-space-reducing (SSR) processes, which are simple history dependent processes that are associated with power-law statistics, and finally for multinomial mixture processes.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Irreversible processes; Nonequilibrium & irreversible thermodynamics; Nonequilibrium statistical mechanics; Random walks; Self-organized criticality
Research Programs: Advanced Systems Analysis (ASA)
Depositing User: Luke Kirwan
Date Deposited: 04 Oct 2017 06:27
Last Modified: 27 Aug 2021 17:41
URI: https://pure.iiasa.ac.at/14863

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