2009
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0004791
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Universality of Rank-Ordering Distributions in the Arts and Sciences

Abstract: Searching for generic behaviors has been one of the driving forces leading to a deep understanding and classification of diverse phenomena. Usually a starting point is the development of a phenomenology based on observations. Such is the case for power law distributions encountered in a wealth of situations coming from physics, geophysics, biology, lexicography as well as social and financial networks. This finding is however restricted to a range of values outside of which finite size corrections are often in… Show more

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Cited by 128 publications
(129 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
(42 reference statements)
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“…However, the scale-free organization of communities up to a certain size persists (with changed parameters), as shown in the main figure 4(a). All curves are fitted by the discrete generalized beta distribution [35], y ¼ Ax…”
Section: Community Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the scale-free organization of communities up to a certain size persists (with changed parameters), as shown in the main figure 4(a). All curves are fitted by the discrete generalized beta distribution [35], y ¼ Ax…”
Section: Community Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, the DGBD can be viewed as a generalized Zipf's law (or power law distribution). The reason for using the DGBD instead of Zipf's law, which has been widely used to fit human behavioral data exhibiting a long tail [13,16,17,22], is that in our data, the rank curves in the rank-ordered plots (individual activity vs. rank) are not perfectly straight lines. The empirical curves deviate from the straight line predicted by Zipf's law at the right tails (Fig.2), and hence estimations based on Zipf's law will be biased.…”
Section: A the Dgbd Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In [34], the relative magnitude of a and b is used to measure the consistency to power-law behavior (a >> b provides a confirming answer, and a << b does not). Equation (21) indicates that the ranked letter frequency distribution in English is very different from a power-law function.…”
Section: Ranked Letter Distributionmentioning
confidence: 99%