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XWord Info Flow Analysis

Sunday, July 5, 2009 by Tony Orbach and Amy Reynaldo

Flow value: 30.1 — 44.4 percentile
Tony Orbach
Tony Orbach
Amy Reynaldo
Amy Reynaldo
Sun 7/5/2009M N O P
GASBAGAMPSUPGOUACHE
OSCARSCYRANOENLACED
SPELLTHEROSESROARING
HINDIARAMAIDAONCE
CAESARSPORTALDANGER
ASTISTATPDAS
CLOGANATTHEPODSQUAD
BOILINGPADSTLTURBO
ELLENENIDCEOSISIT
RAYFLEECERRANLATE
FULLPETALJACKET
ELMUNDOGOULASHIOS
RYESSICSSINERONDO
ILOSTAWESTUDPUFFIN
NEWYORKPETSATOIFOES
MILOISISRNAS
PANABOUTTOWNDEALERS
APERTEALAARELAHTI
BERLIOZPASSCONFUSION
LAVERNEETHERSIRONIC
ORESTESDEUCESSENECA

Solvers and constructors have an intuitive idea of what makes a crossword puzzle "flow" well. Mathematically, flow is a measure of how easily information can propagate through the grid from the clues to the answers. A puzzle with high flow allows solvers to leverage known answers to deduce unknown answers more easily, leading to a more enjoyable solving experience.

Mathematician Fritz Juhnke developed a method to quantify this concept using graph theory. He focused on algebraic connectivity, which measures how well-connected a graph is. (Jump to the scary math section for details).

The results can be surprising, but if you examine the grids closely, you can usually see why certain patterns lead to higher or lower flow.

These calculations first appeared on Crosserville. The algorithm has been tweaked to better match solver intuition, and now Crosserville and XWord Info provide the same results.

Unlike Freshness Factor, Flow values are independent of previous values, day of the week, or grid size or shape.

Flow values for Modern Era crosswords range from 0.0 (puzzle has disconnected regions) to 219.2, with a median value of 31.8.

Some interesting results:

Scary Math

Here are the steps you can use at home to calculate your own grid flow:

  1. This grid has 140 words, so generate a 140x140 Laplacian matrix that completely describes how each word is connected to every other word.
  2. Next, calculate the eigenvalues for this matrix. The second-smallest eigenvalue, also called the Fiedler value, measures how well-connected the graph is. For this puzzle, it's 0.08155860.
  3. Then, multiply that by the number of checked squares in the grid, 369 here.
  4. The final result is 30.095125, and that's our flow value.
Or, if you're a constructor, upload your Across Lite puzzle to the Analyze page, and I'll calculate flow for you.

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