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You are here: Home / Resources / Climate Science Documents / Coupled catastrophes: sudden shifts cascade and hop among interdependent systems

Coupled catastrophes: sudden shifts cascade and hop among interdependent systems

From the Introduction: Sudden changes propagating among coupled systems pose a significant scientific challenge in many disciplines, yet we lack an adequate mathematical understanding of how local sudden changes spread [1]. The Earth’s biosphere, for example, appears to be approaching several planetary-scale sudden changes triggered by human activity, including species extinction, desertification and lake eutrophication, which spread from one spatial patch to another [1]. That spatial spread not only poses dangers but also opportunities for detecting early warning signs [2–4]. Socioeconomic systems have examples, too: booms and busts in business cycles in different economies appear to be synchronizing because of trade, financial and other linkages [5–8]. Poverty traps at multiple scales seem to be coupled [9]. Abrupt declines in an asset price can trigger sharp declines in confidence and fire sales of other assets, as occurred in the 2007–2008 global financial crisis [10]. Protests and social uprisings appear to spread contagiously among countries, with one protest seeming to inspire others via news and social media [11,12].

Publication Date: 2015

Credits: J. R. Soc. Interface 12: 20150712. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2015.0712 Accepted: 20 October 2015

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