System Output
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
A System Output is an output of a system (through system processes and transformation functions).
- AKA: System Result, System Product.
- Context:
- It can (typically) result from System Processes through transformation rules.
- It can (typically) depend on System Inputs through process functions.
- It can (typically) affect External Environment through system boundary.
- It can (typically) maintain System Purpose through goal alignment.
- It can (typically) reflect System State through observable effects.
- ...
- It can (often) serve as Input to other systems.
- It can (often) generate System Feedback through control loops.
- It can (often) exhibit Quality Property through characteristic measures.
- It can (often) follow Output Patterns through regular behavior.
- ...
- It can range from being a Simple Output to being a Complex Output, depending on its transformation complexity.
- It can range from being a Single Output to being a Multiple Output, depending on its output dimension.
- It can range from being a Continuous Output to being a Discrete Output, depending on its output type.
- It can range from being a Deterministic Output to being a Probabilistic Output, depending on its predictability level.
- ...
- It can be measured by a System Output Measure through evaluation metrics.
- It can maintain Quality Standards through control processes.
- It can demonstrate System Performance through effectiveness measures.
- It can support System Goals through purpose fulfillment.
- It can enable System Functions through capability provision.
- ...
- Examples:
- Information Outputs, such as:
- Data Processes, such as:
- Communication Systems, such as:
- Message Delivery through transmission channels.
- Signal Output from processing units.
- Physical Outputs, such as:
- Manufacturing Systems, such as:
- Product Creation through production lines.
- Material Transformation through industrial processes.
- Manufacturing Systems, such as:
- Economic Outputs, such as:
- Market Systems, such as:
- Service Delivery through business processes.
- Value Creation through economic activity.
- Market Systems, such as:
- ...
- Information Outputs, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- System Inputs, which enter rather than exit system boundary.
- Internal States, which exist within system boundary.
- System Processes, which transform rather than produce.
- System Structures, which organize rather than generate.
- See: Process Output, Decoding System, Process Theory, System Theory, Output Analysis, Performance Measurement, Quality Control.
References
2013
- http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Systems_Theory/Inputs-Outputs
- Input is something put into a system or expended in its operation to achieve output or a result. Output is the information produced by a system or process from a specific input. Within the context of systems theory, the inputs are what are put into a system and the outputs are the results obtained after running an entire process or just a small part of a process. Because the outputs can be the results of an individual unit of a larger process, outputs of one part of a process can be the inputs to another part of the process.