Classroom Companion: Business
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Introduction to Digital Economics
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- Definition 9.4 Positive Feedback
Chapter 9 · Network Effects 129 9 a tripping point where it collapses and is thereafter rebuilt (e.g., the housing bubble in 2008). Note that oscillating or quasi-stable markets are also subject to positive feedback from the market. Negative network effects may be generated by negative reviews and low ratings of the product, inferior experience expressed by friends, few active users, or users leaving the product stimulating others to do the same. Things that may amplify negative networks effects are insufficient advertisements (invisibility), poor user experience, technical issues (such as complex login), freeze-out, congestion, long response times, disturbing differential delays, interruptions, and frequent down- times. Positive network effects may include high ratings, high product visibility (band- wagon effect), and excellent user satisfaction as expressed by friends (word of mouth). Observe again that network effects, whether positive or negative, are caused by positive feedback from the market. Feedback implies that some part of the output from a system is routed back to the input of the same system and thus causes an effect on the output. Feedback theory is important in almost all fields of science: physics, chemistry, technol- ogy, social sciences, medicine, economics, and so on. The first deep analysis of feedback phenomena in natural systems was done by the American mathemati- cian and physicist Norbert Wiener (Wiener, 1948 ). There are two types of feed- back: positive feedback and negative feedback. These are well-defined technical terms. Definition 9.4 Positive Feedback Positive feedback is such that if there is a deviation in the output in one or the other direction, the feedback will make this deviation larger. In other words: 5 The feedback is positive if more of A (input) produces more of B (output) and more of B produces more of A and so on until all of A has been consumed. 5 The feedback is also positive if less of A causes less of B and less of B causes less of A until there is no more A left. The most important observation is that positive feedback is the cause of both neg- ative and positive network effects. Positive feedback may also result in periodic or irregular oscillations. This is utilized in, for example, high frequency oscillators producing radio carrier waves for television broadcasting. Applied to economics, this may be the cause of certain types of business phenomena such as repeated economic crashes because of unsus- tainable growth. One common reason for oscillations in the market (and in several other cases such as hunter/prey ecosystems) is long delay in the feedback loop. One example is the “pork cycle” in the early twentieth century where the demand and supply of pork meat were out of phase by one year because deficiency (and high price) of pork meat in one year caused overproduction (and low price) the next year. Another example is higher education where the delay is several years causing Download 5.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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