- Boxology
A boxology is a representation of an organized structure as a graph of labeled nodes ("boxes") and connections between them (as
line s or arrows). The concept is useful because many problems in systems design are reducible to modular "black boxes" and connections or flow channels between them. The term is somewhat tongue-in-cheek and refers to the generic nature of diagrams containing labelled nodes and (sometimes directed) paths between them.The archetypical example of a boxology is a corporate "org chart", which describes lines of control through the corporation. Other boxologies include programming
flow chart s, system-levelcircuit diagram s for designing large complex circuits, and even economic models.Feynman diagrams are useful because they reduce the complicatedmathematics ofquantum mechanics to a simple boxology of particle interactions.Depending on application, the boxes are optional; for example, the global
carbon cycle is modeled as a boxology, but many figures explaining the model include only labels and directed connections.
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