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Complex system

Adapted from Wikipedia ยท Adventurer experience

Diagram showing how complex adaptive systems work and change in different environments.

A complex system is a system with many parts that connect and affect each other. Examples include Earth's global climate, living organisms, the human brain, and large groups like cities. Because these parts work together, it can be hard to know exactly how the whole system will act.

Complex systems have special traits that happen when their parts work together. These traits include surprising patterns, self-adjusting actions, and feedback loops. Scientists study these systems to learn how the whole is more than just the parts put together.

The study of complex systems uses ideas from many areas of science and learning. It includes ideas from physics, biology, mathematics, computer science, and social sciences. This broad view helps us solve problems in many areas, from predicting weather to learning how societies change.

Types of systems

Complex systems can be many kinds. Complex adaptive systems can change and learn over time. Polycentric systems have many parts that work together but also make their own choices. Disorganised systems have many small actions that don't form a clear pattern. Hierarchical systems are made of smaller parts that fit together like puzzle pieces. Cybernetic systems use information to change and react, like a robot fixing its steps based on what it feels.

Key concepts

Complex systems are made of many parts that interact with each other. Some of these systems can change and learn from experience, called complex adaptive systems. Examples include trade markets, ant colonies, the biosphere, the brain, the immune system, cells, embryos, cities, and human groups like political parties or communities.

A system is decomposable if its parts do not affect each other much, like in a model of a perfect gas. In a nearly decomposable system, the parts do affect each other a little, which is common in social systems. These systems can be separated into groups that work mostly independently but still influence each other.

Features

Complex systems are usually open systems. This means they are always changing and using energy. They often stay stable even while changing.

Graphical representation of alternative stable states and the direction of critical slowing down prior to a critical transition (taken from Lever et al. 2020). Top panels (a) indicate stability landscapes at different conditions. Middle panels (b) indicate the rates of change akin to the slope of the stability landscapes, and bottom panels (c) indicate a recovery from a perturbation towards the system's future state (c.I) and in another direction (c.II).

These systems can sometimes change very quickly when conditions shift, like when a lake suddenly freezes or an economy crashes. Parts of complex systems can also be complex themselves. For example, a city is made of many smaller groups. These groups are made of people, and each person is made of tiny cells.

Complex systems can show surprising behaviors. For instance, a group of insects can work together to build something amazing that no single insect could create by itself. Small changes in these systems can lead to big results, for better or worse. Complex systems often have loops where actions affect the system in return, either calming it down or making it grow.

History

In 1948, Dr. Warren Weaver wrote about how science studies problems with many connected parts. The serious study of complex systems began in the 1970s. The first special research center, the Santa Fe Institute, opened in 1984. Many famous scientists have worked there.

Later, scientists who study math and physics began to look at economic problems in new ways. In 2021, the Nobel Prize in Physics was given to three scientists for their work on understanding complex systems. This helped improve predictions about climate change.

Applications

Complexity in practice

When we deal with complicated things, one old way is to break them into smaller parts. For example, companies split their work into different groups, and engineers build things from separate pieces. But this can cause problems when issues happen between those pieces.

Complexity of cities

Cities are very complicated places with many parts that affect each other. If we try to make cities too simple, it can cause big problems. Learning to understand cities' complexity helps us build better, more supportive spaces.

Complexity economics

New tools have been made to help understand how economies grow. These tools come from studies done by groups like the Santa Fe Institute and work by people such as Cesar A. Hidalgo and Ricardo Hausmann.

Complexity and education

Scientists are looking at how ideas from studying complex systems can help in teaching and learning, especially in subjects like physics.

Complexity in healthcare research and practice

Healthcare is a great example of a complex system. It includes many people and groups working together, such as doctors, patients, and governments. Understanding these connections helps improve how we share knowledge and apply research to real medical problems.

Complexity and biology

Scientists also use ideas about complex systems to study living things. For example, they look at heart rates and brain activity to understand health and find illnesses.

Complexity and chaos theory

Complex systems are related to chaos theory, which studies systems that seem very unpredictable. Even though these systems can be hard to forecast, they follow certain rules. Complex systems sit in a middle place between order and randomness, called the "edge of chaos."

Complexity and network science

Complex systems often have many parts that connect to each other, like networks. For example, the Internet is a network of computers connected by links. Other examples include social networks and biological systems.

Notable scholars

Many smart people have studied complex systems to learn how they work. Some famous scholars are Nikola Tesla, who worked with electricity, and W. Ross Ashby, who studied how systems keep their balance. Their work helps us understand how different parts of a system work together and influence each other. They showed us that complex systems, like weather or living things, can behave in surprising ways.

Images

A diagram showing connections between different topics in the study of complex systems.
An animated simulation of Bill Gosper's Glider Gun, a pattern in Conway's Game of Life that continuously creates moving shapes.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Complex system, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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