Leveraging Environmental Correlations: The Thermodynamics of Requisite Variety
Alexander B. Boyd, Dibyendu Mandal, and James P. Crutchfield

TL;DR
This paper develops a thermodynamic framework for information ratchets interacting with structured, correlated environments, revealing how memory enhances work extraction and the limitations of finite-state systems.
Contribution
It introduces a new information-processing Second Law of Thermodynamics for analyzing structured environments and demonstrates the importance of memory in optimal thermodynamic performance.
Findings
Memoryless ratchets can exploit uncorrelated environments.
Memoryful ratchets are more effective with structured, correlated environments.
Infinite-state ratchets can surpass thermodynamic bounds using negentropy.
Abstract
Key to biological success, the requisite variety that confronts an adaptive organism is the set of detectable, accessible, and controllable states in its environment. We analyze its role in the thermodynamic functioning of information ratchets---a form of autonomous Maxwellian Demon capable of exploiting fluctuations in an external information reservoir to harvest useful work from a thermal bath. This establishes a quantitative paradigm for understanding how adaptive agents leverage structured thermal environments for their own thermodynamic benefit. General ratchets behave as memoryful communication channels, interacting with their environment sequentially and storing results to an output. The bulk of thermal ratchets analyzed to date, however, assume memoryless environments that generate input signals without temporal correlations. Employing computational mechanics and a new…
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