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Isolation

Isolation refers to the condition of being separated from others or from a surrounding environment, resulting in limited contact, interaction, or exchange. The concept is used in everyday language and in specialized fields to describe different forms of separation, from physical barriers to social deprivation.

In social and psychological contexts, social isolation describes a lack of meaningful social connections or engagement.

In biology, geographic isolation occurs when physical barriers such as mountains or water bodies prevent gene

In medicine and public health, isolation is the separation of individuals who are infected or suspected of

In science and engineering, isolation also denotes the separation of systems or components to prevent interference

It
can
be
voluntary
or
involuntary
and
is
linked
with
adverse
health
outcomes,
including
increased
risk
of
depression,
cardiovascular
disease,
and
mortality,
especially
among
older
adults.
flow
between
populations,
facilitating
divergent
evolution.
Reproductive
isolation
mechanisms—prezygotic
and
postzygotic—reduce
or
prevent
interbreeding
and
contribute
to
speciation.
infection
to
prevent
transmission.
Practices
include
various
levels
such
as
contact,
droplet,
and
airborne
isolation,
and
may
involve
quarantine
for
exposed
but
asymptomatic
people.
Facilities,
personal
protective
equipment,
and
protocols
are
used
to
enforce
it.
or
hazard.
Electrical
isolation
uses
insulators
or
isolation
transformers
to
prevent
current
flow;
optical
isolation
uses
light
signals.
In
computing,
database
transaction
isolation
levels
describe
how
and
when
changes
by
concurrent
transactions
become
visible,
ranging
from
read
uncommitted
to
serializable.