Weak Links: The Universal Key to the Stability of Networks and Complex Systems

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How can our societies be stabilized in a crisis? Why can we enjoy and understand Shakespeare? Why are fruitflies uniform? How do omnivorous eating habits aid our survival? What makes the Mona Lisa’s smile beautiful? How do women keep our social structures intact? – Could there possibly be a single answer to all these questions? This book shows that the statement: "weak links stabilize complex systems" provides the key to understanding each of these intriguing puzzles, and many others too. The author (recipient of several distinguished science communication prizes) uses weak (low affinity, low probability) interactions as a thread to introduce a vast variety of networks from proteins to economics and ecosystems. Many people, from Nobel Laureates to high-school students have helped to make the book understandable to all interested readers. This unique book and the ideas it develops will have a significant impact on many, seemingly diverse, fields of study.

A very personal, engaging, and unique book that will appeal to readers and get them thinking

Steve Strogatz

An adventurous, entertainingly eclectic and rich work both for experts and laymen

László-Albert Barabási

This masterpiece should serve as an example of how science can be discussed

György Buzsáki

Outstanding - I wish more books were written this way

Daniel J. Bilar

Author(s): Peter Csermely (auth.)
Series: The Frontiers Collection
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Year: 2009

Language: English
Pages: 392
Tags: Geoecology/Natural Processes;Popular Science in Mathematics/Computer Science/Natural Science/Technology;Biophysics/Biomedical Physics;Proteomics;Popular Science in Nature and Environment;Complexity

Front Matter....Pages i-xxii
A Principle is Born: The Granovetter Study....Pages 1-4
Why Do We Like Networks?....Pages 5-52
Network Stability....Pages 53-100
Weak Links as Stabilizers of Complex Systems....Pages 101-116
Atoms, Molecules and Macromolecules....Pages 117-130
Weak Links and Cellular Stability....Pages 131-162
Weak Links and the Stability of Organisms....Pages 163-185
Social Nets....Pages 187-223
Networks of Human Culture....Pages 225-248
The Global Web....Pages 249-269
The Ecoweb....Pages 271-283
Conclusions and Perspectives....Pages 285-322
Back Matter....Pages 1-81