https://centre.santafe.edu/complextime/w/index.php?title=Dynamic_Multi-System_Resilience_in_Human_Aging/SanneGijzel&feed=atom&action=historyDynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/SanneGijzel - Revision history2024-03-28T16:18:20ZRevision history for this page on the wikiMediaWiki 1.35.6https://centre.santafe.edu/complextime/w/index.php?title=Dynamic_Multi-System_Resilience_in_Human_Aging/SanneGijzel&diff=3413&oldid=prevWikiworks: Created page with "{{Attendee note |Post-meeting summary=During the first day, although the talks were very different, they very nicely complemented each other. It is amazing to see that we are..."2019-01-20T17:57:18Z<p>Created page with "{{Attendee note |Post-meeting summary=During the first day, although the talks were very different, they very nicely complemented each other. It is amazing to see that we are..."</p>
<p><b>New page</b></p><div>{{Attendee note<br />
|Post-meeting summary=During the first day, although the talks were very different, they very nicely complemented each other. It is amazing to see that we are all adopting slightly different approaches to investigating resilience in human aging but that they can all be placed in the larger framework of resilience of complex dynamical systems. We are all pioneering in this area and only sharing our struggles and recent insights was already very valuable, at least in my experience.<br />
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During the second day, I began seeing that we are working along 2 parallel lines:<br />
#Finding ways to quantify resilience / resiliencies<br />
#Increasing our understanding of the dynamics of the complex system in terms of resilience<br />
Some reflections:<br />
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- I liked Alfons' idea of making real-life examples of "Resilience is ........" in the form of a short narrative / artwork / graphical illustration / equations. I agree that these can be very helpful to increase our understanding of resilience and involve more people (e.g. clinicians) in the resilience thinking and discourse.<br />
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- Marcel commented that for humans, it's clear that there are alternative stable states in health, but we do not know what are the precise perturbations and positive feedbacks causing the transition. To increase our understanding about this, I think we need to start with making mechanistic models. We can use these mechanistic models to generate new hypotheses.<br />
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- Ingrid pointed out the difference between acute stressors (perturbations, e.g. a stimulus-response test) and slow stressors (drivers, e.g. aging).<br />
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