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pertoll

Pertoll is a term used in several contexts to denote a toll or cost associated with perturbations in a system, typically in theoretical discussions of resilience, stability, or dynamical change. Because it is not standardized, the precise meaning of pertoll varies by field and author.

Etymology and history: The word pertoll appears to be a portmanteau of perturbation and toll; it emerged

In systems theory and network science, pertoll is often defined as the minimum additional resources, such as

In ecology, pertoll is used to describe the incremental energy or risk costs that organisms incur to

In economics and operations research, pertoll can denote a small friction term in models that capture the

Applications are largely theoretical or heuristic; the term is not widely standardized and some researchers prefer

in
informal
academic
and
online
discussions
in
the
early
2010s
and
has
since
appeared
in
a
handful
of
papers
and
preprints
as
a
loose
descriptor
for
perturbation-related
costs.
energy,
bandwidth,
or
control
effort,
required
to
maintain
target
performance
when
the
system
is
disturbed.
In
these
contexts,
pertoll
functions
as
a
heuristic
measure
of
maintenance
burden
under
disruption,
rather
than
a
universally
adopted
metric.
keep
population
trajectories
within
a
desired
range
after
environmental
perturbations.
The
concept
is
sometimes
employed
in
theoretical
models
of
resilience
and
population
stability.
effect
of
perturbations
on
equilibrium
outcomes
or
time
to
recovery
after
shocks.
The
term
is
typically
informal
and
used
to
illustrate
how
minor
disturbances
propagate
through
a
system.
established
concepts
such
as
resilience,
robustness,
or
perturbation
energy.
See
also
resilience;
robustness;
perturbation
theory;
friction.