Critical Behavior in Physics and Probabilistic Formal Languages

We show that the mutual information between two symbols, as a function of the number of symbols between the two, decays exponentially in any probabilistic regular grammar, but can decay like a power law for a context-free grammar. This result about formal languages is closely related to a well-known...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lin, Henry, Tegmark, Max, Tegmark, Max Erik
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
Format: Article
Published: MDPI AG 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/114221
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7670-7190
Description
Summary:We show that the mutual information between two symbols, as a function of the number of symbols between the two, decays exponentially in any probabilistic regular grammar, but can decay like a power law for a context-free grammar. This result about formal languages is closely related to a well-known result in classical statistical mechanics that there are no phase transitions in dimensions fewer than two. It is also related to the emergence of power law correlations in turbulence and cosmological inflation through recursive generative processes. We elucidate these physics connections and comment on potential applications of our results to machine learning tasks like training artificial recurrent neural networks. Along the way, we introduce a useful quantity, which we dub the rational mutual information, and discuss generalizations of our claims involving more complicated Bayesian networks. Keywords: formal languages; statistical mechanics; criticality