[Home]Self-similarity

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A self-similar object is exactly, or approximately, similar to a part of itself. Many objects in the real world, such as coastlines, are statistically self-similar: parts of them show the same statistical properties at many scales.

Self-similarity is a property of fractals.

Self-similarity has important consequences for the design of computer networks, as typical network traffic has self-similar properties. This property means that simple models using a [Poisson distribution]? are inaccurate, and networks designed without taking self-similarity into account are likely to function in unexpected ways.

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Edited November 5, 2001 4:09 am by The Anome (diff)
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