ledinherving
Ledinherving is a theoretical concept in the study of complex systems that describes a proposed mechanism by which distributed networks maintain stability after disturbances. The term is a neologism used to capture how local interactions can guide global dynamics toward robust, balanced states without centralized control.
Mechanism: In ledinherving systems, local rules generate feedback that dampens perturbations. Signals propagate through the network
Contexts and examples: Researchers have applied the concept to robotic swarms, power-grid–like networks, ecological food webs,
Status and criticism: Ledinherving remains largely theoretical. Proponents argue it clarifies how distributed systems achieve stability
See also: self-organization, resilience, distributed control, adaptive systems, feedback mechanisms.