We review the properties of the self-organized critical (SOC) forest-fire
model. The paradigm of self-organized criticality refers to the tendency of
certain large dissipative systems to drive themselves into a critical state
independent of the initial conditions and without fine-tuning of the
parameters. After an introduction, we define the rules of the model and discuss
various large-scale structures which may appear in this system. The origin of
the critical behavior is explained, critical exponents are introduced, and
scaling relations between the exponents are derived. Results of computer
simulations and analytical calculations are summarized. The existence of an
upper critical dimension and the universality of the critical behavior under
changes of lattice symmetry or the introduction of immunity are discussed. A
survey of interesting modifications of the forest-fire model is given. Finally,
several other important SOC models are briefly described.Comment: 37 pages RevTeX, 13 PostScript figures (Figs 1, 4, 13 are of reduced
quality to keep download times small