ergodic
English
Etymology
International Scientific Vocabulary ergo- + -ode (+ -ic)
The etymological origin is disputed[1][2]: ἔργον + ὁδός versus ἔργον + εἶδος.
Adjective
ergodic (comparative more ergodic, superlative most ergodic)
- (mathematics, physics) Of or relating to certain systems that, given enough time, will eventually return to a previously experienced state.
- (statistics, engineering) Of or relating to a process in which every sequence or sample of sufficient size is equally representative of the whole.
- (literature, information science) Of or relating to a literary work that requires nontrivial effort on the reader's part to traverse.
- 2012, Markku Eskelinen, Cybertext Poetics:
- Therefore this chapter moves into two directions, cybertextually expanding (and reorganizing) the field of architextuality, and specifying the ergodic variety within it.
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Derived terms
- ergodic hypothesis
- ergodicity
- ergodic theory
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