User talk:Trevithj

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January 2009

Welcome to Wikipedia. Although everyone is welcome to make constructive contributions to Wikipedia, at least one of your recent edits, such as the one you made to Feedback, did not appear to be constructive and has been automatically reverted by ClueBot ... <snip> ClueBot (talk) 20:32, 19 January 2009 (UTC)

Problem with Firefox during editing: characters were getting reversed. Browser wars? I was editing in Notepad and pasting into the browser to check the changes. Somehow, the lower part of the article got deleted. My bad! Trevithj (talk) 20:29, 27 January 2009 (UTC)

Regarding Electronic oscillator edit summary comment

I'd like to apologise for the comment "That was a controversial edit added by a disruptive editor who has been blocked several times." I wasn't referring to you but to Circuit dreamer, who was a principle player in a long edit conflict about introducing the term "negative resistance" into the harmonic oscillator section. I screwed up and confused the term "negative resistance" with "positive/negative feedback", the subject of your edit. In addition, although I meant "disruptive editor" to apply to CD, it looks like I was talking about you. I'd change it if I could, but I don't think there's any way of editing an edit summary. Anyway, I'm sorry for inadvertently dragging your name through the mud.    ;) --ChetvornoTALK 23:33, 29 February 2012 (UTC)

Have responded on your talk page. Don't think edit summaries are changeable - but hardly the end of the world. No worries! Trevithj (talk) 23:51, 29 February 2012 (UTC)

Feedback Definitions and Possible Scope

There appear to be three fairly distinct usages for "feedback" (FB) in general - and for "positive feedback" (+FB) by extension.

  1. loop: (A influences B, B influences A) Ashby describes the situation where two parts influence each other - where "part" can be anything from a wire to a multinational corporation. This seems the most generic definition of FB, and +FB is when the influences are self-reinforcing.
  2. signal: (A (the process) influences B (the controller)) Several authors (e.g., Ramaprasad) talk about feedback as information used as basis of control. In behavioural contexts, this is often what is meant when people say "give me feedback". +FB is when A and B are moving in the same direction.
  3. control: (B (the controller) influences A (the process)) This is often where the technical distinction of positive/negative FB occurs - if the controller increases the process, it is positive, else negative. Again, with +FB A and B are moving in the same direction.

Three hypothetical cases are described below: one (hopefully) uncontroversial, and the others introducing some areas of ambiguity.

  • Bull market: (A=stock-price, B=investors) Price increases attract investors, which increases prices. By all three definitions above, this is +FB:
1 The entire loop is self-reinforcing -- the more prices increase, the more they increase. This example is ignoring the effect of profit-taking.
2 The signal path is positive -- the increased price results in increased investments;
3 The control action is positive -- more investments ('buy' actions) cause increased stock-price.

And the same would hold true for a Bear market: reduced prices, reduced investors etc.

  • Flood-gates: (A=water-level, B=out-flow) An increasing water level in a reservoir leads to the increasing of outflow through floodgates, so as to maintain the level below maximum. Here some confusion arises in the different definitions:
1 By the loop definition, this is -FB -- increased level leads to decreased level.
2 By the signal definition, this is +FB -- the level and the outflow both increase/decrease together.
3 By the control definition, this is -FB -- increase in outflow causes decrease in level.

Some care needs to be taken with how the 'signal' is defined. Should it include the effect of the outflow in this case?

  • Reverse-floodgates: As above, but assume that the signal definition now supports -FB -- increasing level will now result in decreased outflow.
1 Now the loop is an example of +FB, since rising levels lead to rising levels, and v.v.
2 As stated, the feedback connection is now negative -- increased levels cause decreased outflow.
3 The control link is unchanged. The outflow's effect on the water level remains negative.

To summarise, it is possible for one or both influences to be negative/inverting. This may lead to confusion as to how the FB should be defined. Consideration of the entire loop's effect doesn't seem to have this difficulty, but covers a lot of very different cases where signal/control descriptions are important and varied.

Nice collection of feedback stuff

Essential variables

Cybernetics

Negative feedback

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