25 Years of Self-Organized Criticality: Concepts and Controversies
Nicholas Watkins, Gunnar Pruessner, Sandra Chapman, Norma, Bock Crosby, Henrik Jensen

TL;DR
This paper reviews 25 years of self-organized criticality (SOC), discussing its core concepts, widespread applications, controversies, and misunderstandings, while highlighting its impact on complexity science and plasma physics.
Contribution
It clarifies misconceptions about SOC, examines its evolution across disciplines, and discusses ongoing theoretical and observational challenges since its inception.
Findings
SOC has significantly influenced complexity science and plasma physics.
Discrepancies exist between original SOC definitions and its applications.
Open questions remain in the theoretical understanding of SOC.
Abstract
Introduced by the late Per Bak and his colleagues, self-organized criticality (SOC) has been one of the most stimulating concepts to come out of statistical mechanics and condensed matter theory in the last few decades, and has played a significant role in the development of complexity science. SOC, and more generally fractals and power laws, have attacted much comment, ranging from the very positive to the polemical. The other papers in this special issue (Aschwanden et al, 2014; McAteer et al, 2014; Sharma et al, 2015) showcase the considerable body of observations in solar, magnetospheric and fusion plasma inspired by the SOC idea, and expose the fertile role the new paradigm has played in approaches to modeling and understanding multiscale plasma instabilities. This very broad impact, and the necessary process of adapting a scientific hypothesis to the conditions of a given physical…
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