Computational Model Library

Feedback Loop Example: Forest Resource Transport (1.1.0)

This model illustrates a positive ‘transport’ feedback loop described in Millington (2013). In this type of feedback a line of reduced or increased resistance to flows of information and/or material results in increased or decreased rates of change in linked entities. This particular example represents the role of roads in tropical deforestation in the Amazon basin (e.g., Malanson et al. 2006), facilitating the flow of people and material from settled (core) regions to frontier (periphery) regions, and vice versa. A positive feedback loop is formed as greater flows of people and materials improve economic returns on activities at the periphery, which in turn stimulate improved and greater flows of materials and people along the roads to core markets and elsewhere.

Millington_Fig2_wTime700.png

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Associated Publications

Feedback Loop Example: Forest Resource Transport 1.1.0

This model illustrates a positive ‘transport’ feedback loop described in Millington (2013). In this type of feedback a line of reduced or increased resistance to flows of information and/or material results in increased or decreased rates of change in linked entities. This particular example represents the role of roads in tropical deforestation in the Amazon basin (e.g., Malanson et al. 2006), facilitating the flow of people and material from settled (core) regions to frontier (periphery) regions, and vice versa. A positive feedback loop is formed as greater flows of people and materials improve economic returns on activities at the periphery, which in turn stimulate improved and greater flows of materials and people along the roads to core markets and elsewhere.

Version Submitter First published Last modified Status
1.1.0 James Millington Fri Dec 21 14:28:28 2012 Tue Feb 20 09:23:27 2018 Published
1.0.0 James Millington Fri Dec 21 11:11:07 2012 Tue Feb 20 13:19:28 2018 Published

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