Difference between revisions of "Tolerance (glossary)"
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− | + | a resilience attribute that describes the ability of the system to degrade gracefully in the face of a threat. (Jackson and Ferris, 2013) | |
− | === | + | |
− | Woods, | + | <blockquote>''How a system behaves near a boundary – whether the system gracefully degrades as stress or pressure increases or collapses quickly when pressure exceeds adaptive capacity'' (Woods 2006, 23)</blockquote> |
+ | |||
+ | ===Sources=== | ||
+ | Woods, D.D. 2006. "Essential Characteristics of Resilience." In ''Resilience Engineering: Concepts and Precepts,'' edited by E. Hollnagel, DD. Woods, and N. Leveson. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Publlishing Limited. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Jackson, Scott, and Timothy Ferris. 2013. "Resilience Principles for Engineered Systems." Systems Engineering 16 (2):152-164. | ||
===Discussion=== | ===Discussion=== | ||
− | + | None. | |
[[Category:Glossary of Terms]] | [[Category:Glossary of Terms]] | ||
− | + | <center>'''SEBoK v. 2.2, released 15 May 2020'''</center> | |
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Revision as of 13:20, 13 May 2020
a resilience attribute that describes the ability of the system to degrade gracefully in the face of a threat. (Jackson and Ferris, 2013)
How a system behaves near a boundary – whether the system gracefully degrades as stress or pressure increases or collapses quickly when pressure exceeds adaptive capacity (Woods 2006, 23)
Sources
Woods, D.D. 2006. "Essential Characteristics of Resilience." In Resilience Engineering: Concepts and Precepts, edited by E. Hollnagel, DD. Woods, and N. Leveson. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Publlishing Limited.
Jackson, Scott, and Timothy Ferris. 2013. "Resilience Principles for Engineered Systems." Systems Engineering 16 (2):152-164.
Discussion
None.