Hurst exponent of very long birth time series in XX century Romania. Social and religious aspects
G. Rotundo, M. Ausloos, C. Herteliu, B. Ileanu

TL;DR
This study analyzes long-term birth data in Romania from 1905 to 2001, using fractal analysis to explore persistence, social, and religious influences on birth patterns over a century.
Contribution
It applies detrended fluctuation analysis to long birth time series, revealing persistent fractal behavior and social-religious effects on birth fluctuations within a historical context.
Findings
Birth signals are highly persistent across all groups.
Religious and urban/rural distinctions influence fluctuation strength.
Combined social and religious factors modulate birth pattern variability.
Abstract
The Hurst exponent of very long birth time series in Romania has been extracted from official daily records, i.e. over 97 years between 1905 and 2001 included. The series result from distinguishing between families located in urban (U) or rural (R) areas, and belonging (Ox) or not (NOx) to the orthodox religion. Four time series combining both criteria, (U,R) and (Ox, NOx), are also examined. A statistical information is given on these sub-populations measuring their XX-th century state as a snapshot. However, the main goal is to investigate whether the "daily" production of babies is purely noisy or is fluctuating according to some non trivial fractional Brownian motion, - in the four types of populations, characterized by either their habitat or their religious attitude, yet living within the same political regime. One of the goals was also to find whether combined criteria implied…
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