feedbackia
Feedbackia is a theoretical concept in systems theory describing the cumulative effects of recursive feedback processes within a system. It characterizes how feedback loops can produce responses that are disproportionately large, delayed, or otherwise altered relative to the initial input, leading to stable, oscillatory, or unstable behavior depending on loop gain and delay.
The term is used across engineering, biology, economics, and social dynamics to capture a common motif: feedback
Core ideas include positive feedback, which amplifies signals and can drive runaway growth or tipping points,
Illustrative examples include audio feedback in microphone–speaker setups, ice-albedo feedback in climate systems, and online recommender
Analysis typically uses concepts from control theory and dynamical systems—loop gain, delays, and stability margins—and employs
Critics argue that feedbackia is not a distinct scientific term and risks conflating separate ideas with generic
See also: feedback loop, cybernetics, complex systems, echo chamber.