This talk will review the history of both cluster and histogram methods for Monte Carlo simulations. Cluster methods are based on the famous exact mapping by Fortuin and Kasteleyn from general Potts models onto a percolation representation. I will discuss the Swendsen‐Wang algorithm, as well as its improvement and extension to more general spin models by Wolff. The Replica Monte Carlo method further extended cluster simulations to deal with frustrated systems. The history of histograms is quite extensive, and can only be summarized briefly in this talk. It goes back at least to work by Salsburg et al. in 1959. Since then, it has been forgotten and rediscovered several times. The modern use of the method has exploited its ability to efficiently determine the location and height of peaks in various quantities, which is of prime importance in the analysis of critical phenomena. The extensions of this approach to the multiple histogram method and multicanonical ensembles have allowed information to be obtained over a broad range of parameters. Histogram simulations and analyses have become standard techniques in Monte Carlo simulations.

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