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Common probability patterns arise from simple invariances

Probability 2016-05-24 v2 Statistical Mechanics Mathematical Physics math.MP

Abstract

Shift and stretch invariance lead to the exponential-Boltzmann probability distribution. Rotational invariance generates the Gaussian distribution. Particular scaling relations transform the canonical exponential and Gaussian patterns into the variety of commonly observed patterns. The scaling relations themselves arise from the fundamental invariances of shift, stretch, and rotation, plus a few additional invariances. Prior work described the three fundamental invariances as a consequence of the equilibrium canonical ensemble of statistical mechanics or the Jaynesian maximization of information entropy. By contrast, I emphasize the primacy and sufficiency of invariance alone to explain the commonly observed patterns. Primary invariance naturally creates the array of commonly observed scaling relations and associated probability patterns, whereas the classical approaches derived from statistical mechanics or information theory require special assumptions to derive commonly observed scales.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1602.03559,
  title  = {Common probability patterns arise from simple invariances},
  author = {Steven A. Frank},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1602.03559},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

Fixed mistaken wording about shift invariance in introduction. Added new Appendix A with more details and discussion about related topics. Moved prior appendix to Appendix B. Other minor fixes and new references throughout

R2 v1 2026-06-22T12:48:00.247Z