Emergence as the conversion of information: A unifying theory
Thomas Varley, Erik Hoel

TL;DR
This paper introduces a unifying mathematical framework for emergence based on information conversion, demonstrating that macroscales can contain more of certain information types than microscales, challenging the idea of universal reduction in science.
Contribution
It provides a novel framework for understanding emergence through information conversion, using mutual information and partial information decomposition to show increased synergy at macroscales.
Findings
Macroscale can have more of a certain type of information than microscale.
Mutual information can be decomposed into redundant, unique, and synergistic parts.
Synergy in mutual information can increase at macroscales, indicating information conversion.
Abstract
Is reduction always a good scientific strategy? Does it always lead to a gain in information? The very existence of the special sciences above and beyond physics seems to hint no. Previous research has shown that dimension reduction (macroscales) can increase the dependency between elements of a system (a phenomenon called "causal emergence"). However, this has been shown only for specific measures like effective information or integrated information. Here, we provide an umbrella mathematical framework for emergence based on information conversion. Specifically, we show evidence that a macroscale can have more of a certain type of information than its underlying microscale. This is because macroscales can convert information from one type to another. In such cases, reduction to a microscale means the loss of this type of information. We demonstrate this using the well-understood mutual…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGene Regulatory Network Analysis · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Origins and Evolution of Life
