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Negative and Positive Feedback01:18

Negative and Positive Feedback

Animal organs and organ systems constantly adjust to internal and external changes through a process called homeostasis ("steady state"). Examples of these changes include regulation of the level of glucose or calcium in the blood or internal responses to external temperatures. Homeostasis requires  maintaining an internal dynamic equilibrium:
Positive and Negative Feedback Loops01:18

Positive and Negative Feedback Loops

Animal organs and organ systems constantly adjust to internal and external changes through a process called homeostasis ("steady state"). Examples of these changes include regulation of the level of glucose or calcium in the blood or internal responses to external temperatures. Homeostasis requires  maintaining an internal dynamic equilibrium:
Effects of feedback01:24

Effects of feedback

Feedback in control systems plays a critical role in shaping various operational parameters, extending beyond simple error reduction to influence stability, bandwidth, gain, impedance, and sensitivity. Understanding these effects requires examining a basic feedback system characterized by defined input, output, error, and feedback signals.
Feedback significantly modifies the gain of a control system. The gain of a system without feedback is altered by a factor of one plus GH, where G represents...
Communication01:28

Communication

Sharing information, concepts, and emotions to foster mutual understanding is communication. The sender, recipient, and transaction must be considered in this manner. The sender is the person who shares the message, the recipient is the person who receives and understands the message, and the transaction is the method used to deliver the message and the variables that affect the communication's context and surroundings. The nurse-client connection is built on therapeutic communication.
Within...
Sources of Self-Esteem II: Performance Feedback01:24

Sources of Self-Esteem II: Performance Feedback

Self-esteem is intricately tied to our perception of competence and our ability to exert control over our lives. One of the primary sources of this perception is performance feedback — the ongoing evaluation of our actions in terms of success and failure. According to Franks and Marolla (1976), people derive self-worth from experiencing themselves as causal agents, capable of achieving goals and overcoming obstacles. This process nurtures a critical component of self-esteem: self-efficacy,...
Feedback Loops01:01

Feedback Loops

In most cases, excessive hormone production is prevented by negative feedback—a loop that starts with a stimulus inducing the release of a particular substance, like a hormone, to maintain a certain level before triggering a signal that results in a decrease in further release of the hormone.

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 7, 2026

Assessment of Social Transmission of Food Preferences Behaviors
04:56

Assessment of Social Transmission of Food Preferences Behaviors

Published on: January 25, 2018

Fast, honest feed back.

Vikki Carruth1, Kim Hope

  • 1Surrey & Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust.

Nursing Standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987)
|October 22, 2010
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The National Health Service (NHS) now enables patients to instantly share their experiences after receiving care. This new system aims to capture real-time patient feedback for service improvement.

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Area of Science:

  • Health Informatics
  • Patient Experience Research
  • Healthcare Management

Background:

  • Traditional methods of collecting patient feedback are often retrospective and may not accurately capture immediate experiences.
  • There is a growing need for real-time data collection in healthcare to improve service quality and patient satisfaction.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To introduce and evaluate a new system implemented by the National Health Service (NHS) for immediate post-contact patient experience recording.
  • To assess the feasibility and potential benefits of real-time patient feedback mechanisms within a national healthcare system.

Main Methods:

  • Implementation of a novel digital system allowing patients to submit feedback immediately following interactions with NHS services.
  • Description of the system's technical architecture and patient interface for experience recording.

Main Results:

  • The system facilitates the immediate capture of patient experiences, providing timely insights into service delivery.
  • Early data suggests the system is accessible to patients and generates a stream of real-time feedback.

Conclusions:

  • The introduction of this system represents a significant step towards leveraging immediate patient feedback for quality improvement in the NHS.
  • Real-time experience recording holds promise for enhancing patient-centered care and operational efficiency within healthcare settings.