Logical depth
Logical depth is a measure of complexity devised by Charles H. Bennett based on the computational complexity of an algorithm that can recreate a given piece of information. It differs from Kolmogorov complexity in that it considers the computation time of the algorithm with the shortest length, rather than its length.
See also
References
- Bennett, Charles H. (1988), "Logical Depth and Physical Complexity", in Herken, Rolf, The Universal Turing Machine: a Half-Century Survey, Oxford U. Press, pp. 227–257, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.70.4331
- Craig, Edward (1998), "Computability and Information, Section 6: Logical depth", Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vol. 10: Index, Taylor & Francis, p. 481, ISBN 9780415073103
- Mitchell, Melanie (2009), "Complexity as Logical Depth", Complexity: A Guided Tour, Oxford University Press, pp. 100–101, ISBN 9780199741021
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