Statistics of shared components in complex component systems
Andrea Mazzolini, Marco Gherardi, Michele Caselle, Marco Cosentino, Lagomarsino, Matteo Osella

TL;DR
This paper investigates the statistical distribution of shared components in complex modular systems, revealing that a simple null model based on random draws can explain many empirical occurrence patterns across diverse systems.
Contribution
It introduces a null model for component sharing in complex systems and demonstrates its effectiveness in explaining empirical data, aiding the detection of system-specific features.
Findings
Null model explains shared component distributions in empirical data
Component heterogeneity influences occurrence patterns
Deviations from null model reveal system-specific constraints
Abstract
Many complex systems are modular. Such systems can be represented as "component systems", i.e., sets of elementary components, such as LEGO bricks in LEGO sets. The bricks found in a LEGO set reflect a target architecture, which can be built following a set-specific list of instructions. In other component systems, instead, the underlying functional design and constraints are not obvious a priori, and their detection is often a challenge of both scientific and practical importance, requiring a clear understanding of component statistics. Importantly, some quantitative invariants appear to be common to many component systems, most notably a common broad distribution of component abundances, which often resembles the well-known Zipf's law. Such "laws" affect in a general and non-trivial way the component statistics, potentially hindering the identification of system-specific functional…
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