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Daniel A. Eisenberg
Researcher at Naval Postgraduate School
Publications - 45
Citations - 1733
Daniel A. Eisenberg is an academic researcher from Naval Postgraduate School. The author has contributed to research in topics: Resilience (network) & Critical infrastructure. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 41 publications receiving 1303 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel A. Eisenberg include Engineer Research and Development Center & University of California, Davis.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Resilience metrics for cyber systems
Igor Linkov,Daniel A. Eisenberg,Daniel A. Eisenberg,Kenton J. Plourde,Thomas P. Seager,Julia H. Allen,Alexander Kott +6 more
TL;DR: A generic approach is proposed that could integrate actual data, technical judgment, and literature-based measures to assess system resilience across physical, information, cognitive, and social domains and link national policy goals to specific system measures, such that resource allocation decisions can be translated into actionable interventions and investments.
Journal ArticleDOI
Measurable Resilience for Actionable Policy
Igor Linkov,Daniel A. Eisenberg,Matthew Bates,Derek Chang,Matteo Convertino,Matteo Convertino,Julia H. Allen,Stephen E. Flynn,Thomas P. Seager +8 more
TL;DR: The dominant analytic and governance paradigm of the lastseveral decades has been risk analysis, but recently rhetoric has shifted toward the necessity of understanding and designing for resilience.
Journal Article
An introduction to science studies : the philosophical and social aspects of science and technology
John Ziman,Govind Gopakumar,Deborah Dysart-Gale,Matthew Harsh,Valentina Prado-Lopez,Daniel A. Eisenberg,Lise Laurin,Thomas P. Seager +7 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Interdependent Infrastructure as Linked Social, Ecological, and Technological Systems (SETSs) to Address Lock‐in and Enhance Resilience
Samuel A. Markolf,Mikhail Chester,Daniel A. Eisenberg,David M. Iwaniec,Cliff I. Davidson,Rae Zimmerman,Thaddeus R. Miller,Benjamin L. Ruddell,Heejun Chang +8 more
TL;DR: Treating infrastructure as SETS shows promise for increasing the adaptive capacity of infrastructure systems by highlighting how lock‐in and vulnerabilities evolve and how multidisciplinary strategies can be deployed to address these challenges by broadening the options for adaptation.