Dictionary Definition
feedback
Noun
1 the process in which part of the output of a
system is returned to its input in order to regulate its further
output
2 response to an inquiry or experiment
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Critical assessment on information produced
- After you hand in your essays, I will give both grades and feedback.
- In the context of "cybernetics|systems": The signal that is looped back to control a system within itself.
- The high-pitched howling noise heard when there's a loop between a microphone and a speaker; properly audio feedback and also known as the Larsen effect.
Related terms
Translations
critical assessment on information produced
- Finnish: palaute
- French: évaluation
- German: Rückmeldung
- Russian: обратная связь (obrátnaja svjaz’)
signal that is looped back to control a system
within itself
- Czech: zpětná vazba
- Finnish: palaute
- French: boucle de rétroaction
- German: Rückkopplung
- Polish: sprzężenie zwrotne
- Russian: обратная связь (obrátnaja svjaz’)
howling noise
- Finnish: kierto
- French: effet Larsen
Extensive Definition
Feedback is a process whereby some proportion
of the output signal of a system is passed (fed back) to the
input. This is often used
to control the dynamic behavior of the system. Examples of feedback can
be found in most complex
systems, such as engineering, architecture, economics, thermodynamics, and
biology.
Negative
feedback was applied by Harold
Stephen Black to electrical amplifiers in 1927, but he could
not get his idea patented until 1937. Arturo
Rosenblueth, a Mexican researcher and physician, co-authored a
seminal 1943 paper Behavior, Purpose and Teleology that, according
to Norbert
Wiener (another co-author of the paper), set the basis for the
new science of cybernetics. Rosenblueth
proposed that behavior controlled by negative feedback, whether in
animal, human or machine, was a determinative, directive principle
in nature and human creations.. This kind of feedback is studied in
cybernetics and
control
theory.
In organizations, feedback is
a process of sharing observations, concerns and suggestions between
persons or divisions of the organization with an intention of
improving both personal and organizational performance. Negative
and positive feedback have different meanings in this usage, where
they imply criticism and praise, respectively.
Overview
Feedback is both a mechanism, process and signal that is looped back to control a system within itself. This loop is called the feedback loop. A control system usually has input and output to the system; when the output of the system is fed back into the system as part of its input, it is called the "feedback."Feedback and regulation are self related. The
negative feedback helps to maintain stability in a system in spite
of external changes. It is related to homeostasis. Positive
feedback amplifies possibilities of divergences (evolution, change
of goals); it is the condition to change, evolution, growth; it
gives the system the ability to access new points of equilibrium.
For example, in an organism, most positive
feedback provide for fast autoexcitation of elements of endocrine
and nervous systems (in particular, in stress responses conditions)
and play a key role in regulation of morphogenesis, growth, and
development of organs, all processes which are in essence a rapid
escape from the initial state. Homeostasis is especially visible in
the nervous
and endocrine
systems when considered at organism level.
Types of feedback
Types of feedback are:- negative feedback: which tends to reduce output (but in amplifiers, stabilizes and linearizes operation),
- positive feedback: which tends to increase output, or
- bipolar feedback: which can either increase or decrease output.
Systems which include feedback are prone to
hunting, which is oscillation of output
resulting from improperly tuned inputs of first positive then
negative feedback. Audio feedback typifies this form of
oscillation.
Bipolar feedback is present in many natural and
human systems. Feedback is usually bipolar—that is, positive and
negative—in natural environments, which, in their diversity,
furnish synergic and antagonistic responses to the output of any
system.
Applications
In biology
In biological systems such as organisms, ecosystems, or the biosphere, most parameters must stay under control within a narrow range around a certain optimal level under certain environmental conditions. The deviation of the optimal value of the controlled parameter can result from the changes in internal and external environments. A change of some of the environmental conditions may also require change of that range to change for the system to function. The value of the parameter to maintain is recorded by a reception system and conveyed to a regulation module via an information channel.Biological systems contain many types of
regulatory circuits, both positive and negative. As in other
contexts, positive and negative don't imply consequences of the
feedback have good or bad final effect. A negative feedback loop is
one that tends to slow down a process, while the positive feedback
loop tends to accelerate it. The mirror
neurons are part of a social feedback system, when an observed
action is ´mirrored´ by the brain - like a self performed
action.
Feedback is also central to the operations of
genes and gene
regulatory networks. Repressor
(see Lac
repressor) and activator
proteins are used to
create genetic operons,
which were identified by Francois
Jacob and Jacques
Monod in 1961 as feedback loops. These feedback loops may be
positive (as in the case of the coupling between a sugar molecule
and the proteins that import sugar into a bacterial cell), or
negative (as is often the case in metabolic consumption).
Any self-regulating natural process involves
feedback and is prone to hunting. A well known example in ecology is the oscillation of
the population of snowshoe
hares due to predation from lynxes.
In zymology,
feedback serves as regulation of activity of an enzyme by its
direct product(s) or downstream metabolite(s) in the metabolic
pathway (see Allosteric
regulation).
Hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal and ovaraian or testicular axis
is largely controlled by positive and negative feedback, much of
which is still unknown.
In climate science
The climate system is characterized by strong
feedback loops between processes that affect the state of the
atmosphere, ocean, and land. A simple example is the ice-albedo
positive feedback loop whereby melting snow exposes more dark
ground (of lower albedo),
which in turn absorbs heat and causes more snow to melt. This is
part of the evidence of the danger of global
warming.
In control theory
Feedback is extensively used in control theory, using a variety of methods including state space (controls), pole placement and so forth.The most common general-purpose controller using a
control-loop feedback mechanism is a proportional-integral-derivative
(PID) controller. Each term of the PID controller copes with time.
The proportional term handles the present state of the system, the
integral term handles its past, and the derivative or slope term
tries to predict and handle the future.
In economics and finance
A system prone to hunting (oscillating) is the stock market, which has both positive and negative feedback mechanisms. This is due to cognitive and emotional factors belonging to the field of behavioral finance. For example,- When stocks are rising (a bull market), the belief that further rises are probable gives investors an incentive to buy (positive feedback, see also stock market bubble); but the increased price of the shares, and the knowledge that there must be a peak after which the market will fall, ends up deterring buyers (negative feedback).
- Once the market begins to fall regularly (a bear market), some investors may expect further losing days and refrain from buying (positive feedback), but others may buy because stocks become more and more of a bargain (negative feedback).
George Soros
used the word "reflexism" to describe feedback in the financial
markets and developed an investment theory based on this
principle.
The conventional economic
equilibrium model of supply
and demand supports only ideal linear negative feedback and was
heavily criticized by Paul Ormerod
in his book "The
Death of Economics" which in turn was criticized by traditional
economists. This book was part of a change of perspective as
economists started to recognise that Chaos Theory
applied to nonlinear feedback systems including financial
markets.
In education
Young students will often look up to instructors as experts in the field and take to heart most of the things instructors say. Thus, it is believed that spending a fair amount of time and effort thinking about how to respond to students may be a worthwhile time investment. Here are some general types of feedback that can be used in many types of student assessment:Confirmation Your answer was incorrect.
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. Your choice of Carter suggests some 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 Thomas Jefferson’s school.
(Adapted from Flemming and Levie.)
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)
In electronic engineering
The processing and control of feedback is engineered into many electronic devices and may also be embedded in other technologies.If the signal is inverted on its way round the
control loop, the system is said to have
negative feedback; otherwise, the feedback is said to be
positive. Negative feedback is often deliberately introduced to
increase the stability
and accuracy of a system. This scheme can fail if the input changes
faster than the system can respond to it. When this happens, the
lag in arrival of the feedback signal results in positive feedback,
causing the output to oscillate or hunt
Positive feedback is usually an unwanted consequence of system
behaviour.
Harry
Nyquist contributed the Nyquist plot
for assessing the stability of feedback systems. An easier
assessment, but less general, is based upon gain margin and phase
margin using
Bode plots (contributed by Hendrik
Bode). Design to insure stability often involves frequency
compensation, one method of compensation being pole
splitting.
In government
Examples of feedback in government are:In mechanical engineering
In ancient times, the float valve was used to regulate the flow of water in Greek and Roman water clocks; similar float valves are used to regulate fuel in a carburetor and also used to regulate tank water level in the flush toilet.The windmill was enhanced in 1745
by blacksmith Edmund Lee who added a fantail to keep the face of
the windmill pointing into the wind. In 1787 Thomas Mead
regulated the speed of rotation of a windmill by using a
centrifugal pendulum to adjust the distance between the bedstone
and the runner stone (i.e. to adjust the load).
The use of the centrifugal
governor by James Watt in
1788 to regulate the speed of his steam engine
was one factor leading to the Industrial
Revolution. Steam engines also use float valves and pressure
release valves as mechanical regulation devices. A mathematical
analysis of Watt's governor was done by James
Clerk Maxwell in 1868.
The Great
Eastern was one of the largest steamships of its time and
employed a steam powered rudder with feedback mechanism designed in
1866 by J.McFarlane Gray. Joseph Farcot coined the word servo in 1873 to describe steam
powered steering systems. Hydraulic servos were later used to
position guns. Elmer
Ambrose Sperry of the Sperry
Corporation designed the first autopilot in 1912. Nicolas
Minorsky published a theoretical analysis of automatic ship
steering in 1922 and described the PID
controller.
Internal combustion engines of the late 20th
century employed mechanical feedback mechanisms such as vacuum
advance (see: Ignition
timing) but mechanical feedback was replaced by electronic
engine
management systems once small, robust and powerful single-chip
microcontrollers
became affordable.
In organizations
As an organization seeks to improve its performance, feedback helps it to make required adjustments.Examples of feedback in organizations:
See also
References
Further reading
- Katie Salen and Eric Zimmerman. Rules of Play. MIT Press. 2004. ISBN 0-262-24045-9. Chapter 18: Games as Cybernetic Systems.
- Korotayev A., Malkov A., Khaltourina D. Introduction to Social Macrodynamics: Secular Cycles and Millennial Trends. Moscow: URSS, 2006. ISBN 5-484-00559-0
- Dijk, E., Cremer, D.D., Mulder, L.B., and Stouten, J. "How Do We React to Feedback in Social Dilemmas?" In Biel, Eek, Garling & Gustafsson, (eds.), New Issues and Paradigms in Research on Social Dilemmas, New York: Springer, 2008.
feedback in Catalan: Realimentació
feedback in Czech: Zpětná vazba
feedback in Danish: Feedback
feedback in German: Rückkopplung
feedback in Spanish: Realimentación
feedback in French: Rétroaction
feedback in Korean: 피드백
feedback in Indonesian: Loloh balik
feedback in Italian: Retroazione
feedback in Hebrew: משוב
feedback in Lithuanian: Grįžtamasis ryšys
feedback in Dutch: Terugkoppeling
feedback in Japanese: フィードバック
feedback in Norwegian: Tilbakekobling
feedback in Polish: Sprzężenie zwrotne
feedback in Portuguese: Retroalimentação
feedback in Russian: Обратная связь
feedback in Simple English: Feedback
feedback in Slovak: Spätná väzba
feedback in Slovenian: Povratna zanka
feedback in Serbian: Фидбек
feedback in Finnish: Takaisinkytkentä
feedback in Swedish: Återkoppling
feedback in Turkish: Geri besleme
feedback in Ukrainian: Зворотний зв'язок
feedback in Chinese: 反馈
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
birdies, blooping, blurping, closed loop, closed
sequence, current-control circuit, degeneration, distortion, flip-flop
circuit, flutter,
fluttering, hissing, howling, hum, motorboating, positive
feedback, process loop, quality loop, reversed feedback, rumble, scratching, shredding, squeals, static, whistles, woomping, wow, wowwows