Cyber Resilience of Systems and Networks 2018
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-77492-3_1
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Fundamental Concepts of Cyber Resilience: Introduction and Overview

Abstract: Society is increasingly reliant upon complex and interconnected cyber systems to conduct daily life activities. From personal finance to managing defense capabilities to controlling a vast web of aircraft traffic, digitized information systems and software packages have become integrated at virtually all levels of individual and collective activity. While such integration has been met with immense increases in efficiency of service delivery, it has also been subject to a diverse body of threats from nefarious … Show more

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Cited by 96 publications
(93 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
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“…Ecological perspective of the resilience has been developed by Holling (1996) which is based on the ability of system to react to stressors, to absorb and withstand shocks, with an emphasis on persistence. We consider ecological perspective as the closest one to SC viability since it focuses on the ecosystem services provided to society (Linkov and Kott 2019).…”
Section: Isn Analysis Inspired From Ecology Modellingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ecological perspective of the resilience has been developed by Holling (1996) which is based on the ability of system to react to stressors, to absorb and withstand shocks, with an emphasis on persistence. We consider ecological perspective as the closest one to SC viability since it focuses on the ecosystem services provided to society (Linkov and Kott 2019).…”
Section: Isn Analysis Inspired From Ecology Modellingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the individual level, resilience models can be useful in understanding the role of cycles of disruption and reintegration in rebalancing health and well-being, and the key resources that need to be available and harnessed to help individuals bounce back from adversity (Wister et al, 2016). Resilience and aging research has established support for the importance of emotional/positive affect (Ong et al, 2006), social/family support (Rybarczyk, 2012), health behaviours (Wister et al, 2019), community connectedness (Wiles et al, 2012), and system level components of disaster resilience (Linkov and Kott, 2019). Applications of this research to the COVID-19 pandemic has potential to balance the deleterious consequences with positive adaptation and growth.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…System resilience is commonly defined in terms of a system's ability to provide an ''acceptable level of operation'' under certain conditions [105]. Unfortunately, strict resilience metrics are not universally defined [106], [132], [142]. Once the operation level degrades below a pre-set threshold, various restoration procedures must be carried out until the desired level of operation is achieved.…”
Section: A Formal Resilience Orchestrationmentioning
confidence: 99%