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==History== Self-regulating mechanisms have existed since antiquity, and the idea of feedback started to enter [[Economics|economic theory]] in Britain by the 18th century, but it was not at that time recognized as a universal abstraction and so did not have a name.<ref name=mayr> {{Cite book |author= Otto Mayr|title=Authority, liberty, & automatic machinery in early modern Europe |year=1989 |isbn=978-0-8018-3939-9 | publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |author-link=Otto Mayr }}</ref> The first ever known artificial feedback device was a [[Ballcock|float valve]], for maintaining water at a constant level, invented in 270 BC in [[Alexandria]], [[Ancient Egypt|Egypt]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=Designing Kinetics for Architectural Facades|last=Moloney|first=Jules|publisher=Routledge|year=2011|isbn=978-0415610346}}</ref> This device illustrated the principle of feedback: a low water level opens the valve, the rising water then provides feedback into the system, closing the valve when the required level is reached. This then reoccurs in a circular fashion as the water level fluctuates.<ref name=":0" /> [[Centrifugal governor]]s were used to regulate the distance and pressure between [[millstone]]s in [[windmill]]s since the 17th century. In 1788, [[James Watt]] designed his first centrifugal governor following a suggestion from his business partner [[Matthew Boulton]], for use in the [[steam engine]]s of their production. Early steam engines employed a purely [[reciprocating motion]], and were used for pumping water β an application that could tolerate variations in the working speed, but the use of steam engines for other applications called for more precise control of the speed. In [[1868]], [[James Clerk Maxwell]] wrote a famous paper, "On governors", that is widely considered a classic in feedback control theory.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Maxwell|first=James Clerk|title=On Governors|journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society of London|volume= 16|year= 1868 |pages= 270β283 | doi = 10.1098/rspl.1867.0055 | jstor=112510|doi-access=}}</ref> This was a landmark paper on [[control theory]] and the mathematics of feedback. The verb phrase ''to feed back'', in the sense of returning to an earlier position in a mechanical process, was in use in the US by the 1860s,<ref> ''"Heretofore ... it has been necessary to reverse the motion of the rollers, thus causing the material to travel or feed back, ..."'' HH Cole, "Improvement in Fluting-Machines", [http://www.google.co.nz/patents/US55469 US Patent 55,469 (1866)] accessed 23 March 2012. </ref><ref> ''"When the journal or spindle is cut ... and the carriage is about to feed back by a change of the sectional nut or burr upon the screw-shafts, the operator seizes the handle..."'' JM Jay, "Improvement in Machines for Making the Spindles of Wagon-Axles", [http://www.google.co.nz/patents/US47769 US Patent 47,769 (1865)] accessed 23 March 2012. </ref> and in 1909, Nobel laureate [[Karl Ferdinand Braun]] used the term "feed-back" as a noun to refer to (undesired) [[Coupling (electronics)|coupling]] between components of an [[electronic circuit]].<ref>''"...as far as possible the circuit has no feed-back into the system being investigated."'' [http://www.cdvandtext2.org/Braun-Nobel-lecture%201909.pdf] Karl Ferdinand Braun, [https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1909/braun-lecture.html "Electrical oscillations and wireless telegraphy"], Nobel Lecture, 11 December 1909. Retrieved 19 March 2012.</ref> By the end of 1912, researchers using early electronic amplifiers ([[audion tube|audions]]) had discovered that deliberately coupling part of the output signal back to the input circuit would boost the amplification (through [[Regenerative circuit|regeneration]]), but would also cause the audion to howl or sing.<ref name="bennett">{{Cite book |author=Stuart Bennett |url=http://worldcat.org/isbn/0-906-04807-9 |title=A history of control engineering, 1800β1930 |publisher=Peregrinus for the Institution of Electrical Engineers |year=1979 |isbn=978-0-906048-07-8 |location=Stevenage; New York}} [https://books.google.com/books?id=1gfKkqB_fTcC] </ref> This action of feeding back of the signal from output to input gave rise to the use of the term "feedback" as a distinct word by 1920.<ref name=bennett/> The development of [[cybernetics]] from the 1940s onwards was centred around the study of circular causal feedback mechanisms. Over the years there has been some dispute as to the best definition of feedback. According to cybernetician [[William Ross Ashby|Ashby]] (1956), mathematicians and theorists interested in the principles of feedback mechanisms prefer the definition of "circularity of action", which keeps the theory simple and consistent. For those with more practical aims, feedback should be a deliberate effect via some more tangible connection. {{Blockquote|[Practical experimenters] object to the mathematician's definition, pointing out that this would force them to say that feedback was present in the ordinary pendulum ... between its position and its momentumβa "feedback" that, from the practical point of view, is somewhat mystical. To this the mathematician retorts that if feedback is to be considered present only when there is an actual wire or nerve to represent it, then the theory becomes chaotic and riddled with irrelevancies.<ref name=Ashby> {{cite book |author=W. Ross Ashby |title=An introduction to cybernetics |publisher=Chapman & Hall |year=1957 |url=http://pcp.vub.ac.be/books/IntroCyb.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000823230638/http://pcp.vub.ac.be/books/IntroCyb.pdf |archive-date=2000-08-23 |url-status=live}}</ref>{{rp|page=54}}}} Focusing on uses in management theory, Ramaprasad (1983) defines feedback generally as "...information about the gap between the actual level and the reference level of a system parameter" that is used to "alter the gap in some way". He emphasizes that the information by itself is not feedback unless translated into action.<ref name="Ramaprasad">{{Cite journal | doi=10.1002/bs.3830280103|title = On the definition of feedback| journal=Behavioral Science| volume=28| pages=4β13|year = 1983|last1 = Ramaprasad|first1 = Arkalgud}}</ref>
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