This 2002 title offers a broad investigative tool in ergodic theory and measurable dynamics.This monograph offers a broad investigative tool in ergodic theory and measurable dynamics. Themotivation for this work is that one may measure how similar two dynamical systems are by asking how much the time structure of orbits of one system must be distorted for it to become the other.The authors develop a general approach and give insights into how to seek further applications. The work is placed in a context that makes the results applicable to a wide range of problems and examples.This monograph offers a broad investigative tool in ergodic theory and measurable dynamics. Themotivation for this work is that one may measure how similar two dynamical systems are by asking how much the time structure of orbits of one system must be distorted for it to become the other.The authors develop a general approach and give insights into how to seek further applications. The work is placed in a context that makes the results applicable to a wide range of problems and examples.This monograph offers a broad investigative tool in ergodic theory and measurable dynamics. The motivation for this work is that one may measure how similar two dynamical systems are by asking how much the time structure of orbits of one system must be distorted for it to become the other. Different restrictions on the allowed distortion will lead to different restricted orbit equivalence theories. These include Ornstein's Isomorphism theory, Kakutani Equivalence theory and a list of others. By putting such restrictions in an axiomatic framework, a general approach is developed that encompasses all of these examples simultaneously and gives insight into how to seek further applications.1. Preface; 2. Definitions and examples; 3. The OrnsteinWeiss machinery; 4. Copying lemmas; 5. m-entropy; 6. m-joinings; 7. The equivalence theorem; 8. Appendix.Review of the hardback: '& this profound book & gives an attractlÓ$