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Resources on systemic phenomena, their causes and effects Information1 #330250 Game theory, algorithms, crowd induced effects, systems dynamics archetypes | |
+Citations (11) - CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[10] Feedback in Social Sciences
Author: Wikipedia Cited by: Poor Richard 10:08 AM 7 June 2014 GMT Citerank: (1) 360460Known effects, phenomena, paradoxesExamples of self reinforcing and self multiplying feedback loops that widen gaps and foster accumulation, and other effects that corrupt a system or produces unintended consequences. That it would be interesting to interpret using patterns. Some may actually be the result of the same phenomenon, i.e. combination of patterns, or constitute elementary patterns themselves.8FFB597 URL: | Excerpt / Summary Education
In the majority of universities, teachers decide learning objectives and feedbacks to students.
Types of reinforcement / Reinforcement Example
Confirmation Your answer was correct. Corrective Your answer was incorrect. The correct answer was Jefferson. Explanatory Your answer was incorrect because Carter was from Georgia; only Jefferson called Virginia home. Diagnostic Your answer was incorrect. Extra instruction on the home states of past presidents might be helpful. Elaborative Your answer, Jefferson, was correct. The University of Virginia, a campus rich with Jeffersonian architecture and writings, is sometimes referred to as "Mr. Jefferson's University".
A different application of feedback in education is the system for "continuous improvement" of engineering curricula monitored by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET).
Examples of feedback in organizations:
Financial audit Performance appraisal Shareholders' meeting Marketing research 360-degree feedback Walkout Lockout
In Psychology
One application of feedback in psychology, education, and organizations is feedback intervention; defined as "actions taken by (an) external agent(s) to provide information regarding some aspect(s) of one's task performance."[38] Despite common beliefs that such feedback is typically effective, Kluger & DeNisi (1996) reported a meta-analysis that showed that in 38% of the experiments published between 1905 and 1992, feedback caused a decline in performance.[38] Moreover, the decline in performance was not related to whether the feedback was positive or negative (i.e., encouraging or critical). This result was explained with Higgins' self-discrepancy theory. Specifically, positive feedback seems to improve motivation and performance when people are promotion-focused (doing things out of a desire; working on a task requiring creativity.) Whereas negative feedback improves performance when people are prevention-focused (doing things out of an obligation; working on a task requiring vigilance.) |
Link[11] System dynamics
Author: Wikipedia Cited by: Poor Richard 10:18 AM 7 June 2014 GMT Citerank: (1) 360460Known effects, phenomena, paradoxesExamples of self reinforcing and self multiplying feedback loops that widen gaps and foster accumulation, and other effects that corrupt a system or produces unintended consequences. That it would be interesting to interpret using patterns. Some may actually be the result of the same phenomenon, i.e. combination of patterns, or constitute elementary patterns themselves.8FFB597 URL: | Excerpt / Summary System dynamics is an approach to understanding the behaviour of complex systems over time. It deals with internal feedback loops and time delays that affect the behaviour of the entire system.[1] What makes using system dynamics different from other approaches to studying complex systems is the use of feedback loops and stocks and flows. These elements help describe how even seemingly simple systems display baffling nonlinearity.
Causal loop diagrams https://upload.wikimed...
In the system dynamics methodology, a problem or a system (e.g., ecosystem, political system or mechanical system) is first represented as a causal loop diagram.[4] A causal loop diagram is a simple map of a system with all its constituent components and their interactions. By capturing interactions and consequently the feedback loops (see figure below), a causal loop diagram reveals the structure of a system. By understanding the structure of a system, it becomes possible to ascertain a system’s behavior over a certain time period
[There are many more topics, equations, feedback diagrams, etc. in this article. ] |
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