In descriptive
statistics
Statistics (from German language, German: ', "description of a State (polity), state, a country") is the discipline that concerns the collection, organization, analysis, interpretation, and presentation of data. In applying statistics to a s ...
and
chaos theory
Chaos theory is an interdisciplinary area of Scientific method, scientific study and branch of mathematics. It focuses on underlying patterns and Deterministic system, deterministic Scientific law, laws of dynamical systems that are highly sens ...
, a recurrence plot (RP) is a plot showing, for each moment
in time, the times at which the state of a
dynamical system
In mathematics, a dynamical system is a system in which a Function (mathematics), function describes the time dependence of a Point (geometry), point in an ambient space, such as in a parametric curve. Examples include the mathematical models ...
returns to the previous state at
,
i.e., when the
phase space
The phase space of a physical system is the set of all possible physical states of the system when described by a given parameterization. Each possible state corresponds uniquely to a point in the phase space. For mechanical systems, the p ...
trajectory visits roughly the same area in the phase space as at time
. In other words, it is a plot of
:
showing
on a horizontal axis and
on a vertical axis, where
is the state of the system (or its phase space trajectory).
Background
Natural processes can have a distinct recurrent behaviour, e.g. periodicities (as
seasonal
A season is a division of the year based on changes in weather, ecology, and the number of daylight hours in a given region. On Earth, seasons are the result of the axial parallelism of Earth's axial tilt, tilted orbit around the Sun. In temperat ...
or
Milankovich cycles), but also irregular cyclicities (as
El Niño
EL, El or el may refer to:
Arts and entertainment Fictional entities
* El, a character from the manga series ''Shugo Chara!'' by Peach-Pit
* Eleven (''Stranger Things'') (El), a fictional character in the TV series ''Stranger Things''
* El, fami ...
Southern Oscillation, heart beat intervals). Moreover, the recurrence of states, in the meaning that states are again arbitrarily close after some time of
divergence
In vector calculus, divergence is a vector operator that operates on a vector field, producing a scalar field giving the rate that the vector field alters the volume in an infinitesimal neighborhood of each point. (In 2D this "volume" refers to ...
, is a fundamental property of
deterministic
Determinism is the metaphysical view that all events within the universe (or multiverse) can occur only in one possible way. Deterministic theories throughout the history of philosophy have developed from diverse and sometimes overlapping mo ...
dynamical systems
In mathematics, a dynamical system is a system in which a Function (mathematics), function describes the time dependence of a Point (geometry), point in an ambient space, such as in a parametric curve. Examples include the mathematical models ...
and is typical for
nonlinear
In mathematics and science, a nonlinear system (or a non-linear system) is a system in which the change of the output is not proportional to the change of the input. Nonlinear problems are of interest to engineers, biologists, physicists, mathe ...
or
chaotic system
Chaos theory is an interdisciplinary area of scientific study and branch of mathematics. It focuses on underlying patterns and deterministic laws of dynamical systems that are highly sensitive to initial conditions. These were once thought to ...
s (cf.
Poincaré recurrence theorem). The recurrence of states in nature has been known for a long time and has also been discussed in early work (e.g.
Henri Poincaré
Jules Henri Poincaré (, ; ; 29 April 185417 July 1912) was a French mathematician, Theoretical physics, theoretical physicist, engineer, and philosophy of science, philosopher of science. He is often described as a polymath, and in mathemati ...
1890).
Detailed description
One way to visualize the recurring nature of states by their trajectory through a
phase space
The phase space of a physical system is the set of all possible physical states of the system when described by a given parameterization. Each possible state corresponds uniquely to a point in the phase space. For mechanical systems, the p ...
is the recurrence plot, introduced by Eckmann et al. (1987). Often, the phase space does not have a low enough dimension (two or three) to be pictured, since higher-dimensional phase spaces can only be visualized by projection into the two or three-dimensional sub-spaces. One frequently used tool to study the behaviour of such phase space trajectories is then the
Poincaré map
In mathematics, particularly in dynamical systems, a first recurrence map or Poincaré map, named after Henri Poincaré, is the intersection of a periodic orbit in the state space of a continuous dynamical system with a certain lower-dimensiona ...
. Another tool, is the recurrence plot, which enables us to investigate many aspects of the ''m''-dimensional phase space trajectory through a two-dimensional representation.
At a recurrence the trajectory returns to a location (state) in phase space it has visited before up to a small error
. The recurrence plot represents the collection of pairs of times of such recurrences, i.e., the set of
with
, with
and
discrete points of time and
the state of the system at time
(location of the trajectory at time
).
Mathematically, this is expressed by the binary recurrence matrix
:
where
is a norm and
the recurrence threshold. An alternative, more formal expression is using the
Heaviside step function
The Heaviside step function, or the unit step function, usually denoted by or (but sometimes , or ), is a step function named after Oliver Heaviside, the value of which is zero for negative arguments and one for positive arguments. Differen ...
with
the norm of distance vector between
and
.
Alternative recurrence definitions consider different distances
, e.g.,
angular distance
Angular distance or angular separation is the measure of the angle between the orientation (geometry), orientation of two straight lines, ray (geometry), rays, or vector (geometry), vectors in three-dimensional space, or the central angle subtende ...
,
fuzzy distance, or
edit distance
In computational linguistics and computer science, edit distance is a string metric, i.e. a way of quantifying how dissimilar two String (computing), strings (e.g., words) are to one another, that is measured by counting the minimum number of opera ...
.
The recurrence plot visualises
with coloured (mostly black) dot at coordinates
if
, with time at the
- and
-axes.
If only a univariate
time series
In mathematics, a time series is a series of data points indexed (or listed or graphed) in time order. Most commonly, a time series is a sequence taken at successive equally spaced points in time. Thus it is a sequence of discrete-time data. ...
is available, the phase space can be reconstructed, e.g., by using a time delay embedding (see
Takens' theorem):
:
where
is the time series (with
and
the sampling time),
the embedding dimension and
the time delay. However, phase space reconstruction is not essential part of the recurrence plot (although often stated in literature), because it is based on phase space trajectories which could be derived from the system's variables directly (e.g., from the three variables of the
Lorenz system) or from multivariate data.
The visual appearance of a recurrence plot gives hints about the dynamics of the system. Caused by characteristic behaviour of the phase space trajectory, a recurrence plot contains typical small-scale structures, as single dots, diagonal lines and vertical/horizontal lines (or a mixture of the latter, which combines to extended clusters). The large-scale structure, also called ''texture'', can be visually characterised by ''homogenous'', ''periodic'', ''drift'' or ''disrupted''. For example, the plot can show if the trajectory is strictly periodic with period
, then all such pairs of times will be separated by a multiple of
and visible as diagonal lines.
The small-scale structures in recurrence plots contain information about certain characteristics of the dynamics of the underlying system. For example, the length of the diagonal lines visible in the recurrence plot are related to the divergence of phase space trajectories, thus, can represent information about the chaoticity.
Therefore, the
recurrence quantification analysis quantifies the distribution of these small-scale structures.
This quantification can be used to describe the recurrence plots in a quantitative way. Applications are classification, predictions, nonlinear parameter estimation, and transition analysis. In contrast to the heuristic approach of the recurrence quantification analysis, which depends on the choice of the embedding parameters, some
dynamical invariants as
correlation dimension In chaos theory, the correlation dimension (denoted by ''ν'') is a measure of the dimensionality of the space occupied by a set of random points, often referred to as a type of fractal dimension.
For example, if we have a set of random points on t ...
,
K2 entropy or
mutual information
In probability theory and information theory, the mutual information (MI) of two random variables is a measure of the mutual Statistical dependence, dependence between the two variables. More specifically, it quantifies the "Information conten ...
, which are independent on the embedding, can also be derived from recurrence plots. The base for these dynamical invariants are the recurrence rate and the distribution of the lengths of the diagonal lines.
More recent applications use recurrence plots as a tool for time series imaging in machine learning approaches and studying spatio-temporal recurrences.
Close returns plots are similar to recurrence plots. The difference is that the relative time between recurrences is used for the
-axis (instead of absolute time).
The main advantage of recurrence plots is that they provide useful information even for short and non-stationary data, where other methods fail.
Extensions
Multivariate extensions of recurrence plots were developed as cross recurrence plots and joint recurrence plots.
Cross recurrence plots consider the phase space trajectories of two different systems in the same phase space:
:
The dimension of both systems must be the same, but the number of considered states (i.e. data length) can be different. Cross recurrence plots compare the occurrences of ''similar states'' of two systems. They can be used in order to analyse the similarity of the dynamical evolution between two different systems, to look for similar matching patterns in two systems, or to study the time-relationship of two similar systems, whose time-scale differ.
Joint recurrence plots are the
Hadamard product of the recurrence plots of the considered sub-systems,
[
] e.g. for two systems
and
the joint recurrence plot is
:
In contrast to cross recurrence plots, joint recurrence plots compare the simultaneous occurrence of ''recurrences'' in two (or more) systems. Moreover, the dimension of the considered phase spaces can be different, but the number of the considered states has to be the same for all the sub-systems. Joint recurrence plots can be used in order to detect
phase synchronisation.
Example
See also
*
Poincaré plot
*
Recurrence period density entropy, an information-theoretic method for summarising the recurrence properties of both deterministic and stochastic dynamical systems.
*
Recurrence quantification analysis, a heuristic approach to quantify recurrence plots.
*
Self-similarity matrix
*
Dot plot (bioinformatics)
In bioinformatics a dot plot is a graphical method for comparing two biological sequences and identifying regions of close similarity after sequence alignment. It is a type of recurrence plot.
History
One way to visualize the similarity betwee ...
References
{{reflist
External links
Recurrence Plot
Plots (graphics)
Signal processing
Dynamical systems
Visualization (graphics)
Chaos theory
Scaling symmetries