There are
two primary challenges faced by all complex, adaptive systems.
One is an
uncertain and noisy environment.
The other
is conflict.
Conflict
arises when the interests of system components – whether genes, cells,
individuals, or states – are not fully aligned.
Some have
gone so far as to argue that lack of alignment, or “frustration,” in many body
systems is the defining feature of complex systems.
In the long
3.5 billion year history of life on earth organisms and aggregates have devised
manifold strategies in order to survive and prosper in the face of conflict.
The
solutions that organisms have built for managing conflict are thought to have
played a central role in facilitating the major transitions from simple
aggregates to more integrated, social organisms, and cultures.
Although
these transitions suggest nature has been successful at predicting and managing
conflict, the problem is not a simple one.
Controlling
conflict is tricky because it is both a destabilizing force and an agent of
innovation – thus nature has evolved mechanisms of good management, not
suppression.
Conflict
can have multiple, nonlinear causes and effects, and these often lie at
different timescales (e.g. evolutionary, ontogenetic, societal).
Conflict
can be the outcome of competitive processes and involve deception or be
generated by differing priorities, communications failures, and error.
Despite
this complexity, data indicate that similar conflicts with comparable
mechanisms of control have evolved at different levels of biological and social
organization.
This
suggests that there might be a universal class of mechanisms that have arisen
across very different levels to control co-evolutionary escalation.
This focus
area brings together evolutionary theorists, immunologists, experts on
behavioral conflict in human and animal societies, computer scientists,
molecular biologists, economists, and complex systems theorists all seeking to
understand how conflict has shaped their systems.
Areas of
research include principles of immunity in social, computer and biological
immune systems; inductive game theory and the extraction of conflict strategies
from time series data; the causes, consequences, and detection of anomalous
patterns of conflict; the timescales of conflict and the implications of
multiple timescales for individual and system prediction and control of
conflict, robustness, and adaptation; tradeoffs between conflict as a source of
innovation and conflict as a destabilizing perturbation; and computing adaptive
conflict decision-making strategies under uncertainty.
Robustness
Robustness
may refer to:
In biology
- Robustness
(evolution), the persistence of a system’s characteristic behavior under
perturbations or conditions of uncertainty.
According
to the kind of perturbation involved, it can be classified as mutational
robustness, environmental robustness, etc
- Mutational robustness,
the extent to which an organism's phenotype remains constant in spite of
mutation
Robust
control
Robust
optimization
Robust
decision, a decision that is as immune to uncertainty as is possible and looks
good to all constituents long after it is made
Robust
decision making
Robust
statistics, a statistical technique that performs well even if its assumptions
are somewhat violated by the true model from which the data were generated
Robustness
(computer science)
Robustness
(economics)
See also
- Fault-tolerant system
and links thereof
4 comentarios:
Muy interesante, pero en general los organimos parasito de un organismo mas grande evolucionan para no matar al organismo que lo contiene.
Por lo que agradecería que me explique porque el peronismo siempre nos deja a la puerta de un desastre o en el desastre.
Saludos.
El artículo es interesante, la analogía obvia que ocurre con los mafiosos en la calle prepoteando al mafioso paquete, no tanto... ¿Gendarmería, multa y demás medidas represivas serían la innovación?. Yo pensé que eran la profundización del modelo ;)
Ah, esta linea en particular me parece una huevada:
This suggests that there might be a universal class of mechanisms that have arisen across very different levels to control co-evolutionary escalation.
Hace años me leí un libro de Roger Lewin muy bueno sobre el tema de la incertidumbre y la complejidad pero para mi sigue haciendo agua la teoría de sistemas aplicada a las ciencias sociales.
Ese actor pasivo en "nosotros", en el comentario del anónimo de las 15:27 posiblemente sea el núcleo de cuestión de todos-nuestros-males. Como lo es el de todos-nuestros-bienes, claro.
"El peronismo nos deja..." ?
Adonde nos dejan (nos dejan ?) los demás "ismos" del mundo (mirá que amplitud)
El Peronismo es la lucha del Establishment (un cuadrilátero del establishment: el pueblo y la sociedad media se dedican a la compra-venta de hot dogs y bebidas caseras alrededor del ring). La misma se embandera según es eslogan de la justicia social y popular. Pero todos saben que básicamente es una lucha entre dos facciones del Establishment (lucha que los dirigentes respetan como un decálogo). De ahí que el Peronismo es una tecnocracia por antonomasia. Pero como toda tecnocracia agravada no puede durar mucho, de ahí que cada tantos años, el sistema se quiebra.
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