TEMPORAL FLUCTUATIONS IN BIORHYTHMS: EXPRESSION OF SELF-ORGANIZED CRITICALITY?

Author:

KNIFFKI KLAUS-D.1,MANDEL WOLFGANG2,TRAN-GIA PHUOC2

Affiliation:

1. Physiologisches Institut and Institut für Informatik, Röntgenring 9 and Am Hubland, Universität Würzburg, D-97070 Würzburg, Germany

2. Röntgenring 9 and Am Hubland, Universität Würzburg, D-97070 Würzburg, Germany

Abstract

Recently, a general organizing principle has been reported connecting 1/f-noise with the self-similar scale-invariant ‘fractal’ properties in space, hence reflecting two sides of a coin, the so-called self-organized critical state. The basic idea is that dynamical systems with many degrees of freedom operate persistently far from equilibrium at or near a threshold of stability at the border of chaos. Temporal fluctuations which cannot be explained as consequences of statistically independent random events are found in a variety of physical and biological phenomena. The fluctuations of these systems can be characterized by a power spectrum density S(f) decaying as f−b at low frequencies with an exponent b<1.5. We present a new approach to describe the individual biorhythm of humans using data from a colleague who has kept daily records for two years of his state of well-being applying a fifty-point magnitude category scale. This time series was described as a point process by introducing two discriminating rating levels R for the occurrence of R≥40 and R≤10. For b<1 a new method to estimate the low frequency part of S(f) was applied using counting statistics without applying Fast Fourier Transform. The method applied reliably discriminates these types of fluctuations from a random point process, with b=0.0. It is very tempting to speculate that the neural mechanisms at various levels of the nervous system underlying the perception of different values of the subjective state of well-being, are expressions of a self-organized critical state.

Publisher

World Scientific Pub Co Pte Lt

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Geometry and Topology,Modelling and Simulation

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Correlated dynamics in human printing behavior;Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications;2006-02

2. Temporal patterns of human behaviour: are there signs of deterministic 1/f scaling?;Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications;2000-02

3. Scaling properties in temporal patterns of schizophrenia;Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications;1996-09

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