In statistics, burstiness is the intermittent increases and decreases in activity or frequency of an event.
[1][2] One measure of burstiness is the Fano factor—a ratio between the variance and mean of counts.
Burstiness is observable in natural phenomena, such as natural disasters, or other phenomena, such as network/data/email network traffic[3][4] or vehicular traffic.
[5] Burstiness is, in part, due to changes in the probability distribution of inter-event times.
[6] Distributions of bursty processes or events are characterised by heavy, or fat, tails.
[1] Burstiness of inter-contact time between nodes in a time-varying network can decidedly slow spreading processes over the network.
This is of great interest for studying the spread of information and disease.
The burstiness score of a subset
is the total number of occurrences of event
Burstiness score can be used to determine if
is a "bursty period" relative to
A negative score implies otherwise.