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What are patterns of rise and decline?

Year of publication

2023

Authors

Raulo, Aura; Rojas Briceno, Alexis; Kröger, Björn; Laaksonen, Antti; Lamuela Orta, Carlos; Nurmio, Silva; Peltoniemi, Mirva; Lahti, Leo; Zliobaite, Indre

Abstract

The notions of change, such as birth, death, growth, evolution and longevity, extend across reality, including biological, cultural and societal phenomena. Patterns of change describe how success and composition of every entity, from species to societies, vary across time. Languages develop into new languages, music and fashion continuously evolve, economies rise and decline, ecological and societal crises come and go. A common way to perceive and analyse change processes is through patterns of rise and decline, the ubiquitous, often distinctively unimodal trajectories describing life histories of various entities. These patterns come in different shapes and are measured according to varying definitions. Depending on how they are measured, patterns of rise and decline can reveal, emphasize, mask or obscure important dynamics in natural and cultural phenomena. Importantly, the variations of how dynamics are measured can be vast, making it impossible to directly compare patterns of rise and decline across fields of science. Standardized analysis of these patterns has the potential to uncover important but overlooked commonalities across natural phenomena and potentially help us catch the onset of dramatic shifts in entities' state, from catastrophic crashes in success to gradual emergence of new entities. We provide a framework for standardized recognizing, characterizing and comparing patterns of change by combining understanding of dynamics across fields of science. Our toolkit aims at enhancing understanding of the most general tendencies of change, through two complementary perspectives: dynamics of emergence and dynamics of success. We gather comparable cases and data from different research fields and summarize open research questions that can help us understand the universal principles, perception-biases and field-specific tendencies in patterns of rise and decline of entities in nature.
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Organizations and authors

University of Helsinki

Rojas Briceno Alexis

Laaksonen Antti

Kröger Björn

Lamuela Orta Carlos

Zliobaite Indre

Nurmio Silva

Tampere University

Peltoniemi Mirva Orcid -palvelun logo

University of Turku

Raulo Aura

Lahti Leo

Publication type

Publication format

Article

Parent publication type

Journal

Article type

Review article

Audience

Scientific

Peer-reviewed

Peer-Reviewed

MINEDU's publication type classification code

A2 Review article, Literature review, Systematic review

Publication channel information

Parent publication name

Royal Society Open Science

Volume

10

Issue

11

Article number

230052

​Publication forum

81005

​Publication forum level

1

Open access

Open access in the publisher’s service

Yes

Open access of publication channel

Fully open publication channel

Self-archived

Yes

License of the self-archived publication

CC BY

Other information

Fields of science

Statistics and probability; Computer and information sciences; Other natural sciences; Business and management; Social and economic geography; Environmental sciences; Ecology, evolutionary biology; Languages

Keywords

[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]

Publication country

United Kingdom

Internationality of the publisher

International

Language

English

International co-publication

Yes

Co-publication with a company

No

DOI

10.1098/rsos.230052

The publication is included in the Ministry of Education and Culture’s Publication data collection

Yes