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Editorial Special Issue: Part Iv-Iii-Ii-I Series

Author

Listed:
  • YELÄ°Z KARACA

    (University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, 55 Lake Avenue North, Worcester, MA 01655, USA)

  • DUMITRU BALEANU

    (��Lebanese American University, Beirut 11022801, Lebanon and Institute of Space Sciences, Magurele-Bucharest 077125, Romania)

  • MAJAZ MOONIS

    (University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, 55 Lake Avenue North, Worcester, MA 01655, USA)

  • YU-DONG ZHANG

    (��The University of Leicester, University Road Leicester LE1 7RH, UK)

  • OSVALDO GERVASI

    (�Universitá degli Studi di Perugia, 06123 Perugia, Italy)

Abstract

Complex systems, as interwoven miscellaneous interacting entities that emerge and evolve through self-organization in a myriad of spiraling contexts, exhibit subtleties on global scale besides steering the way to understand complexity which has been under evolutionary processes with unfolding cumulative nature wherein order is viewed as the unifying framework. Indicating the striking feature of non-separability in components, a complex system cannot be understood in terms of the individual isolated constituents’ properties per se, it can rather be comprehended as a way to multilevel approach systems behavior with systems whose emergent behavior and pattern transcend the characteristics of ubiquitous units composing the system itself. This observation specifies a change of scientific paradigm, presenting that a reductionist perspective does not by any means imply a constructionist view; and in that vein, complex systems science, associated with multiscale problems, is regarded as ascendancy of emergence over reductionism and level of mechanistic insight evolving into complex system. While evolvability being related to the species and humans owing their existence to their ancestors’ capability with regards to adapting, emerging and evolving besides the relation between complexity of models, designs, visualization and optimality, a horizon that can take into account the subtleties making their own means of solutions applicable is to be entailed by complexity. Such views attach their germane importance to the future science of complexity which may probably be best regarded as a minimal history congruent with observable variations, namely the most parallelizable or symmetric process which can turn random inputs into regular outputs. Interestingly enough, chaos and nonlinear systems come into this picture as cousins of complexity which with tons of its components are involved in a hectic interaction with one another in a nonlinear fashion amongst the other related systems and fields. Relation, in mathematics, is a way of connecting two or more things, which is to say numbers, sets or other mathematical objects, and it is a relation that describes the way the things are interrelated to facilitate making sense of complex mathematical systems. Accordingly, mathematical modeling and scientific computing are proven principal tools toward the solution of problems arising in complex systems’ exploration with sound, stimulating and innovative aspects attributed to data science as a tailored-made discipline to enable making sense out of voluminous (-big) data. Regarding the computation of the complexity of any mathematical model, conducting the analyses over the run time is related to the sort of data determined and employed along with the methods. This enables the possibility of examining the data applied in the study, which is dependent on the capacity of the computer at work. Besides these, varying capacities of the computers have impact on the results; nevertheless, the application of the method on the code step by step must be taken into consideration. In this sense, the definition of complexity evaluated over different data lends a broader applicability range with more realism and convenience since the process is dependent on concrete mathematical foundations. All of these indicate that the methods need to be investigated based on their mathematical foundation together with the methods. In that way, it can become foreseeable what level of complexity will emerge for any data desired to be employed. With relation to fractals, fractal theory and analysis are geared toward assessing the fractal characteristics of data, several methods being at stake to assign fractal dimensions to the datasets, and within that perspective, fractal analysis provides expansion of knowledge regarding the functions and structures of complex systems while acting as a potential means to evaluate the novel areas of research and to capture the roughness of objects, their nonlinearity, randomness, and so on. The idea of fractional-order integration and differentiation as well as the inverse relationship between them lends fractional calculus applications in various fields spanning across science, medicine and engineering, amongst the others. The approach of fractional calculus, within mathematics-informed frameworks employed to enable reliable comprehension into complex processes which encompass an array of temporal and spatial scales notably provides the novel applicable models through fractional-order calculus to optimization methods. Computational science and modeling, notwithstanding, are oriented toward the simulation and investigation of complex systems through the use of computers by making use of domains ranging from mathematics to physics as well as computer science. A computational model consisting of numerous variables that characterize the system under consideration allows the performing of many simulated experiments via computerized means. Furthermore, Artificial Intelligence (AI) techniques whether combined or not with fractal, fractional analysis as well as mathematical models have enabled various applications including the prediction of mechanisms ranging extensively from living organisms to other interactions across incredible spectra besides providing solutions to real-world complex problems both on local and global scale. While enabling model accuracy maximization, AI can also ensure the minimization of functions such as computational burden. Relatedly, level of complexity, often employed in computer science for decision-making and problem-solving processes, aims to evaluate the difficulty of algorithms, and by so doing, it helps to determine the number of required resources and time for task completion. Computational (-algorithmic) complexity, referring to the measure of the amount of computing resources (memory and storage) which a specific algorithm consumes when it is run, essentially signifies the complexity of an algorithm, yielding an approximate sense of the volume of computing resources and seeking to prove the input data with different values and sizes. Computational complexity, with search algorithms and solution landscapes, eventually points toward reductions vis à vis universality to explore varying degrees of problems with different ranges of predictability. Taken together, this line of sophisticated and computer-assisted proof approach can fulfill the requirements of accuracy, interpretability, predictability and reliance on mathematical sciences with the assistance of AI and machine learning being at the plinth of and at the intersection with different domains among many other related points in line with the concurrent technical analyses, computing processes, computational foundations and mathematical modeling. Consequently, as distinctive from the other ones, our special issue series provides a novel direction for stimulating, refreshing and innovative interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary and transdisciplinary understanding and research in model-based, data-driven modes to be able to obtain feasible accurate solutions, designed simulations, optimization processes, among many more. Hence, we address the theoretical reflections on how all these processes are modeled, merging all together the advanced methods, mathematical analyses, computational technologies, quantum means elaborating and exhibiting the implications of applicable approaches in real-world systems and other related domains.

Suggested Citation

  • Yelä°Z Karaca & Dumitru Baleanu & Majaz Moonis & Yu-Dong Zhang & Osvaldo Gervasi, 2023. "Editorial Special Issue: Part Iv-Iii-Ii-I Series," FRACTALS (fractals), World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd., vol. 31(10), pages 1-58.
  • Handle: RePEc:wsi:fracta:v:31:y:2023:i:10:n:s0218348x2302005x
    DOI: 10.1142/S0218348X2302005X
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    Keywords

    Applied Mathematics; Computational Mathematics; Pure Mathematics; Mathematical Sciences; Discrete Mathematics; Mathematical Physics; Theoretical Sciences; Exact Science; Computational Methods; Computational Intelligence; Applied Sciences; Computer Science; Computational Science; Data Science; Engineering; Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Exact Sciences; Natural Sciences; Social Sciences; Nonlinear Dynamics; Nonlinear Systems; Linear Systems; Fractional Calculus AI; Control; Control Systems; Optimization; Complexity; Chaos; Uncertainty; Causality; Symmetry; Oscillations; Bifurcation; Stability; Sensitivity; Quantum; Medicine; Biology; Physics; Chemistry; Mathematical Bioengineering; Mathematical Neuroscience; Mathematical Biology; Artificial Intelligence; Neural Networks; Artificial Neural Networks; Data-Driven Models; Encryption; Soft Computing; Coding Theory; Machine Learning; Deep Learning; Intelligent Systems; Probabilities and Stochastic Processes; Game Theory; Solitons; Fractals; Multifractals; Fractional Calculus; Fractional Dynamics; Fractional Mathematics; Fractional Systems; Fractional Models; Fractals; Multifractals; Waves; Wavelet; Entropy; Algebraic Methods; Computational (-Algorithmic) Complexity; Fractional Order Differential Equations; Fractional Differential Equations; Fuzzy Fractional Differential Equations; Special Functions; Functional Analysis; Error Estimations; Fuzzy Calculus; Differential/Integral Equations; Stochastic Differential Equations; Fractal-Fractional Differential Equations; Fractional-Order Controllers; Fractional-Order Systems; Intelligent Fractional Order Systems; Variational Principles; Image and/or Signal Processing; Mathematical Models; Fractal AI; Fractional AI; Fractals-Fractional AI; Quantum AI; Dynamical systems; Chaotic Systems; Complex Systems;
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