(Press-News.org) Energy production systems are good examples of complex systems. Their infrastructure equipment requires ancillary sub-systems structured like a network—including water for cooling, transport to supply fuel, and ICT systems for control and management. Every step in the network chain is interconnected with a wider network and they are all mutually dependent. A team of UK-based scientists has studied various aspects of inter-network dependencies, not previously explored. The findings have been published in EPJ B by Gaihua Fu from Newcastle University, UK, and colleagues. These findings could have implications for maximising the reliability of such networks when facing natural and man-made hazards.
Previous research has focused on studying single, isolated systems, not interconnected ones. However, understanding inter-connectedness is key, since failure of a component in one network can cause problems across the entire system, which can result in a cascading failure across multiple sectors, as in the energy infrastructure example quoted above.
In this study, interdependent systems are modelled as a network of networks. The model characterises interdependencies in terms of direction, redundancy, and extent of inter-network connectivity.
Fu and colleagues found that the severity of cascading failure increases significantly when inter-network connections are one-directional. They also found that the degree of redundancy—which is linked to the number of connections—in inter-network connections can have a significant effect on the robustness of systems, depending on the direction of inter-network connections.
The authors observed that the interdependencies between many real-world systems have characteristics that are consistent with the less reliable systems they tested, and therefore they are likely to operate near their critical thresholds. Finally, ways of cost-effectively reducing the vulnerability of inter-dependent networks are suggested.
INFORMATION:
Reference: Fu, G. et al. (2014). Interdependent networks: Vulnerability analysis and strategies to limit cascading failure. European Physical Journal B. DOI 10.1140/epjb/e2014-40876-y
Image: Impact of network topologies | © Fu et al.
For more information visit: http://www.epj.org
The full-text article is available to journalists on request.
Inter-dependent networks stress test
A new study relies on a complex systems modelling approach to analyse inter-dependent networks and improve their reliability in the event of failure
2014-08-28
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Quantum physics enables revolutionary imaging method
2014-08-28
This news release is available in German. Researchers from the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information (IQOQI), the Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology (VCQ), and the University of Vienna have developed a fundamentally new quantum imaging technique with strikingly counterintuitive features. For the first time, an image has been obtained without ever detecting the light that was used to illuminate the imaged object, while the light revealing the image never touches the imaged object.
In general, to obtain an image of an object one has to illuminate ...
This is your brain's blood vessels on drugs
2014-08-28
WASHINGTON, Aug. 28, 2014—A new method for measuring and imaging how quickly blood flows in the brain could help doctors and researchers better understand how drug abuse affects the brain, which may aid in improving brain-cancer surgery and tissue engineering, and lead to better treatment options for recovering drug addicts. The new method, developed by a team of researchers from Stony Brook University in New York, USA and the U.S. National Institutes of Health, was published today in The Optical Society's (OSA) open-access journal Biomedical Optics Express.
The researchers ...
Ancient metal workers were not slaves but highly regarded craftsmen
2014-08-28
In 1934, American archaeologist Nelson Glueck named one of the largest known copper production sites of the Levant "Slaves' Hill." This hilltop station, located deep in Israel's Arava Valley, seemed to bear all the marks of an Iron Age slave camp – fiery furnaces, harsh desert conditions, and a massive barrier preventing escape. New evidence uncovered by Tel Aviv University archaeologists, however, overturns this entire narrative.
In the course of ongoing excavations at Timna Valley, Dr. Erez Ben-Yosef and Dr. Lidar Sapir-Hen of TAU's Department of Archaeology and Near ...
Global warming pioneer calls for CO2 to be taken from atmosphere and stored underground
2014-08-28
Wally Broeker, the first person to alert the world to Global Warming, has called for atmospheric CO2 to be captured and stored underground. He says that Carbon Capture, combined with limits on fossil fuel emissions, is the best way to avoid global warming getting out of control over the next fifty years. Professor Broeker (Columbia University, New York) made the call during his presentation to the International Carbon Conference in Reykjavik, Iceland, where 150 scientists are meeting to discuss Carbon Capture and Storage.
He was presenting an analysis which showed that ...
Neuroscientists watch imagination happening in the brain
2014-08-28
"You may say I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one," sang John Lennon in his 1971 song Imagine.
And thanks to the dreams of a BYU student, we now know more about where and how imagination happens in our brains.
Stefania Ashby and her faculty mentor devised experiments using MRI technology that would help them distinguish pure imagination from related processes like remembering.
"I was thinking a lot about planning for my own future and imagining myself in the future, and I started wondering how memory and imagination work together," Ashby said. "I wondered if they ...
Protected areas proven to protect biodiversity
2014-08-28
Protected areas conserve biodiversity and more action is needed to ensure safeguards are in place to protect these areas, researchers say.
Published in PLOS ONE, researchers from Monash University, Stellenbosch University and the University of Exeter, used meta-analysis - combining results from different studies - to look at the past 30 years of research into these areas, to determine whether they actually protect biodiversity.
Dr Bernard Coetzee, School of Biological Sciences, said protecting an area from human exploitation made common sense, however, up until now ...
Serotonin transporter is a mifepristone pharmacological target
2014-08-28
In the central nervous system, serotonergic transmission is critically regulated by serotonin reuptake through the serotonin transporter. As a crucial pharmacological target of antidepressants, the role of erotonin transporter in treatment of major depression is well-established. Dr. Chaokun Li and co-workers from Xinxiang Medical University in China cloned the human brain serotonin transporter into Xenopus oocytes, to establish an in vitro expression system. Two-electrode voltage clamp recordings were used to detect serotonin transporter activity. Their results show that ...
Vasopressin decreases neuronal apoptosis during cardiopulmonary resuscitation
2014-08-28
Epinephrine has been shown to be a first-choice drug for cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Nevertheless, its β-adrenergic effect probably increases myocardial oxygen consumption and leads to severe cardiac and cerebral injuries; moreover, epinephrine does not elevate long-term survival rates. The American Heart Association and the European Resuscitation Council recently recommended that vasopressin can be used for cardiopulmonary resuscitation, instead of epinephrine. However, the guidelines do not discuss the effects of vasopressin during cerebral resuscitation. According ...
Sciatic nerve repair using adhesive bonding and a modified conduit
2014-08-28
When repairing nerves with adhesives, most researchers place glue directly on the nerve stumps, but this method does not fix the nerve ends well and allows glue to easily invade the nerve ends. Ordinarily, nerve conduits are cylindrical. However, it is difficult to insert the nerve ends into the conduit because the nerve is soft and there is frictional resistance. Xiangdang Liang and co-workers from the General Hospital of Chinese PLA designed a special conduit for the adhesive technique and defined the best parameters for its use through in vitro testing, and then repaired ...
New technique uses fraction of measurements to efficiently find quantum wave functions
2014-08-28
The result of every possible measurement on a quantum system is coded in its wave function, which until recently could be found only by taking many different measurements of a system and estimating a wave function that best fit all those measurements. Just two years ago, with the advent of a technique called direct measurement, scientists discovered they could reliably determine a system's wave function by "weakly" measuring one of its variables (e.g. position) and "strongly" measuring a complementary variable (momentum). Researchers at the University of Rochester have ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Epidural electrical stimulation for functional recovery in incomplete spinal cord injury
Transformative eye research expands donor pool for corneal transplant patients
Retinal implant restores central vision in patients with advanced AMD, study co-led by Pitt investigator shows
Eye prosthesis is the first to restore sight lost to macular degeneration
Pioneering eye device restores reading vision to blind eyes
Subretinal implant partially restores vision in AMD patients
3D printed antenna arrays developed for flexible wireless systems
When is the brain like a subway station? When it’s processing many words at once
Important phenomenon discovered in the Arctic – could boost marine life
New white paper urges policymakers to modernize practice laws to unlock AI’s full potential in healthcare
Unmasking the culprits of battery failure with a graphene mesosponge
AASM announces finalists for first Sleep Medicine Disruptors Innovation Award
Combination therapy could expand treatment options for AML patients, extend survival
Microscopic DNA ‘flowers’ could deliver medicine exactly where it’s needed
Hormone therapy alters body proteins to match gender identity
Eat, explore, rest: a leptin-sensing brain circuit helps overcome anxiety to meet vital needs
2D devices have hidden cavities that can modify electronic behavior
Experts urge risk-based monitoring as Barrett’s esophagus care moves beyond one-size-fits-all
How multiple sclerosis harms a brain long before symptoms appear
Did marine life in the palaeocene use a compass?
About 9 in 10 haven’t heard of condition that affects nearly 90% of U.S. adults
Personalized brain stimulation offers new hope for people with hard-to-treat epilepsy
The tiny droplets that bounce without bursting
Immunotherapy after surgery shows promise in treating rare, aggressive skin cancer
Immunotherapy after surgery shows potential in preventing the spread of aggressive skin cancer
What is the extent of disparities in cancer clinical trials among low- and middle-income countries?
Invisible poison: Airborne mercury from gold mining is contaminating African food crops, new study warns
Nearly half of Finns with chronic conditions find medication therapy a burden
Do animals fall for optical illusions? What fish and birds can teach us about perception
New guideline emphasizes conversations about mood, mental health between patients and clinicians
[Press-News.org] Inter-dependent networks stress testA new study relies on a complex systems modelling approach to analyse inter-dependent networks and improve their reliability in the event of failure