Most data processing techniques, applied to biomedical and sociological time
series, are only valid for random fluctuations that are stationary in time.
Unfortunately, these data are often non stationary and the use of techniques of
analysis resting on the stationary assumption can produce a wrong information
on the scaling, and so on the complexity of the process under study. Herein, we
test and compare two techniques for removing the non-stationary influences from
computer generated time series, consisting of the superposition of a slow
signal and a random fluctuation. The former is based on the method of wavelet
decomposition, and the latter is a proposal of this paper, denoted by us as
step detrending technique. We focus our attention on two cases, when the slow
signal is a periodic function mimicking the influence of seasons, and when it
is an aperiodic signal mimicking the influence of a population change (increase
or decrease). For the purpose of computational simplicity the random
fluctuation is taken to be uncorrelated. However, the detrending techniques
here illustrated work also in the case when the random component is correlated.
This expectation is fully confirmed by the sociological applications made in
the companion paper. We also illustrate a new procedure to assess the existence
of a genuine scaling, based on the adoption of diffusion entropy, multiscaling
analysis and the direct assessment of scaling. Using artificial sequences, we
show that the joint use of all these techniques yield the detection of the real
scaling, and that this is independent of the technique used to detrend the
original signal.Comment: 39 pages, 13 figure