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Fine Dictionary

self-organisation

ˌsɛlˌfɔrgənɪˈzeɪʃən
WordNet
  1. (n) self-organisation
    organizing yourself (especially organizing your own labor union)
Usage in the news

Twenty-five years after the murder of UDA leader John McMichael, the organisation is once again pushing the self-destruct button, says Brian Rowan. belfasttelegraph.co.uk

Usage in scientific papers

This is a promising direction of research, as it tries to model ecosystems in greater detail than the simple self-organised critical models.
Biological Evolution and Statistical Physics

Arenas, Self-similar community structure in organisations.
Fast algorithm for detecting community structure in networks

This technique is based on a specific class of NN, called the Self Organising Map (SOM).
The Structure Functions and Low x Working Group Summary

This option was used in Ref. , where inhomogeneities of T were shown to lead to some kind of self-organisation.
Around the gap between sociophysics and sociology

Solomon, Ising, Schel ling and self-organising segregation, Eur.
Around the gap between sociophysics and sociology

Usage in literature

Their first duty was to explain the law, and to organise the new peasant self-government. "Russia" by Donald Mackenzie Wallace

Had I ever in my life lost my own self-command, that command which sets us where we stand as men, as sane, highly-organised beings? "To-morrow?" by Victoria Cross

In several of the West Indian settlements self-governing institutions were organised during these years. "The Expansion of Europe" by Ramsay Muir

All this means discipline, self-denial, self-sacrifice, organising ability, confidence and courage. "Freedom's Battle" by Mahatma Gandhi

Throughout all this British organisation runs the increasing purpose of an Empire Self-Contained. "The War After the War" by Isaac Frederick Marcosson

Long wars, vast organisations, subtle codes, beacon crimes, leading virtues, and self-mighty men were here. "Thomas Davis, Selections from his Prose and Poetry" by Thomas Davis

The result would probably be a great growth of spiritual life, and wholesome church organisation, and self-support. "India and the Indians" by Edward F. Elwin

The bane of organised labour in the past has too often been the unscrupulous, the self-seeking, or the bull-headed labour leader. "The Higher Powers of Mind and Spirit" by Ralph Waldo Trine

It is a spiritual and temporal organisation of small extent, yet of a certain self-sufficing completeness. "A History of England Principally in the Seventeenth Century, Volume I (of 6)" by Leopold von Ranke

The regional associations, which are the pivot of the present organisation, are self-governing societies, with a capital of their own. "Readings in Money and Banking" by Chester Arthur Phillips