Homeostasis

Name
Homeostasis
Self-regulation
Description
Description

1. Dynamic self-regulation (involving periodicity), namely the ability of a system to maintain its fundamental, internal balances even while undergoing various processes of change.

2. The regulating system which determines the homeostasis of a particular feature may comprise a number of cooperating factors brought into action at the same time or successively. If a state remains steady, it does so because any tendency toward change is automatically met by increased effectiveness of the factor or factors which resist change. When a factor is known that can shift a homeostatic state in one direction, it is reasonable to look for automatic control of that factor or for a factor or factors which act in the opposite direction.

3. A tendency toward maintenance of a relatively stable internal environment in organisms, in organizations, and in individuals (i.e. the psychological condition), with respect to changing external environmental conditions, and the processes of growth and decay.

4. A property of all systems that maintain critical variables within limits acceptable to their own structure in the face of unexpected disturbance.

Categorization
Content quality
Unpresentable
English
Editorial
Exclude Wikipedia
include
1A4N
C0226
docid
11302260
d7nid
226501
Authored
Authored
by tomi
Last edited
by nadia
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