variandiks
Variandiks are a class of hypothetical informational agents used in the study of complex adaptive systems. Each variandik represents a unit of information whose output is not fixed but can vary systematically with context, allowing a single unit to produce multiple functional variants.
In theory, variandiks are characterized by three features: contextual variability, bounded adaptability, and replicative potential. Contextual
Two broad categories are described: static-core variandiks exhibit a fixed internal core with a variable frontier,
Applications: In theoretical modeling, variandiks are used to explore how variability at the unit level affects
Origins and reception: The concept appears in simulations of complex networks and agent-based models in the
See also: Variants, Variability, Complex systems, Agent-based models.