Title :
Contrasting Views of Complexity and Their Implications For Network-Centric Infrastructures
Author :
Alderson, David L. ; Doyle, John C.
Author_Institution :
Oper. Res. Dept., Naval Postgrad. Sch., Monterey, CA, USA
fDate :
7/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
There exists a widely recognized need to better understand and manage complex “systems of systems,” ranging from biology, ecology, and medicine to network-centric technologies. This is motivating the search for universal laws of highly evolved systems and driving demand for new mathematics and methods that are consistent, integrative, and predictive. However, the theoretical frameworks available today are not merely fragmented but sometimes contradictory and incompatible. We argue that complexity arises in highly evolved biological and technological systems primarily to provide mechanisms to create robustness. However, this complexity itself can be a source of new fragility, leading to “robust yet fragile” tradeoffs in system design. We focus on the role of robustness and architecture in networked infrastructures, and we highlight recent advances in the theory of distributed control driven by network technologies. This view of complexity in highly organized technological and biological systems is fundamentally different from the dominant perspective in the mainstream sciences, which downplays function, constraints, and tradeoffs, and tends to minimize the role of organization and design.
Keywords :
biology; computational complexity; distributed control; minimisation; architecture role; biological systems; complexity views; distributed control; minimization; network-centric infrastructures; robustness role; systems-of-systems; technological systems; Architecture; complexity theory; networks; optimal control; optimizationmethods; protocols;
Journal_Title :
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, Part A: Systems and Humans, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TSMCA.2010.2048027