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Network Resilience
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== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Remembering</span> == * '''Network Resilience''' β The ability of a network to maintain its "Connectivity" and "Function" when nodes or edges are removed. * '''Robustness''' β The "Strength" of a system against "Random" failures (e.g., a "Car" that still runs with one flat tire). * '''Cascading Failure''' (The Domino Effect) β When the failure of "One Node" puts "Too much pressure" on its neighbors, causing them to fail, leading to a "Total Collapse" (e.g., the 2003 North American Blackout). * '''Redundancy''' β Having "Multiple Paths" to the same goal (The "Back-up" system). * '''Scale-Free Robustness''' β The property of networks with "Hubs": they are "Indestructible" by random failure but "Fragile" to targeted attacks on the Hubs. * '''Connectivity''' β The measure of "How many pieces" a network breaks into (The "Giant Component"). * '''Percolation Theory''' β The math of "When a network becomes a whole" (and when it "Falls apart"). * '''Node Removal''' β Simulating an "Attack" or "Failure" to see what happens to the rest of the system. * '''Self-Healing''' β The ability of a network to "Reroute" its traffic or "Grow new links" after a failure (e.g., "The Internet" or "The Human Brain" after a stroke). * '''Modularity''' β Having "Semi-Independent" groups; if one group "Crashes," the "Firewall" stops the failure from reaching the other groups. </div> <div style="background-color: #006400; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
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