Difference between revisions of "Neutral State (glossary)"
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− | <blockquote>'' | + | <blockquote>''A resilience design principle that states that a system should be put into neutral if possible following a disruption.'' (Madni and Jackson 2009)</blockquote> |
− | === | + | According to Jackson and Ferris (2013) neutral state is a component principle in the tolerance attribute grouping. |
− | Madni, | + | |
+ | |||
+ | ===Sources=== | ||
+ | Madni, A. and S. Jackson. 2009. "Towards a conceptual framework for resilience engineering." IEEE ''Systems Journal'' 3(2):181-191. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Jackson, Scott, and Timothy Ferris. 2013. "Resilience Principles for Engineered Systems." Systems Engineering 16 (2):152-164. | ||
===Discussion=== | ===Discussion=== | ||
− | This is a key resilience design principle | + | This is a key resilience design principle. |
[[Category:Glossary of Terms]] | [[Category:Glossary of Terms]] | ||
− | + | <center>'''SEBoK v. 2.9, released 20 November 2023'''</center> | |
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Latest revision as of 23:41, 18 November 2023
A resilience design principle that states that a system should be put into neutral if possible following a disruption. (Madni and Jackson 2009)
According to Jackson and Ferris (2013) neutral state is a component principle in the tolerance attribute grouping.
Sources
Madni, A. and S. Jackson. 2009. "Towards a conceptual framework for resilience engineering." IEEE Systems Journal 3(2):181-191.
Jackson, Scott, and Timothy Ferris. 2013. "Resilience Principles for Engineered Systems." Systems Engineering 16 (2):152-164.
Discussion
This is a key resilience design principle.