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Cybernetic

Cybernetics is an interdisciplinary field that studies regulatory and informational processes in complex systems, focusing on how systems use feedback to maintain stability, adapt to changing conditions, and achieve goals. It covers biological, mechanical, and social systems and analyzes communication, control, and organization.

Core concepts include feedback loops, homeostasis, control theory, and the processing and transmission of information within

Historically, the term was popularized by Norbert Wiener in the late 1940s, notably in his book Cybernetics:

Key ideas include negative and positive feedback, closed-loop control, autonomy, adaptability, and information flows. Cybernetics often

Applications span automation, robotics, computer science, cognitive science, biology, and organizational theory. The framework provides tools

Some scholars view cybernetics as a foundational framework that informs related approaches such as general systems

and
between
parts
of
a
system.
Cybernetics
emphasizes
how
systems
regulate
themselves
through
information
exchange,
rather
than
relying
solely
on
mechanical
description.
Or
Control
and
Communication
in
the
Animal
and
the
Machine
(1948).
Wiener
and
later
researchers
such
as
W.
Ross
Ashby,
Margaret
Mead,
and
Heinz
von
Foerster
expanded
the
field,
highlighting
self-regulation,
adaptive
behavior,
and
the
law
of
requisite
variety.
uses
models
of
computation
and
communication
to
describe
regulatory
architectures
that
span
disciplines
from
engineering
to
biology.
for
analyzing
how
systems
sustain
function,
respond
to
perturbations,
and
coordinate
components.
theory
and
the
study
of
cyber-physical
systems,
illustrating
its
influence
across
technology,
life
sciences,
and
social
science.