black box
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: 1. A device that records data about the performance and condition of an aircraft or vehicle during its operation, designed to survive a crash and aid in accident investigation. - This is the primary and most common meaning. It refers to a flight recorder, which is typically bright orange for visibility, not black.
Usage
- The term is used to describe a sealed unit whose internal workings are not necessary for the user to understand; its importance lies in its input (data) and output (the recorded information).
- It is most commonly associated with aviation but can be applied by analogy to similar recording devices in other vehicles (e.g., ships, trains) or complex systems.
Examples
- Investigators recovered the black box from the crash site to determine the cause of the accident.
- Modern aircraft have two essential black boxes: the flight data recorder and the cockpit voice recorder.
- The ship's black box provided crucial data about the engine performance before the collision.
Advanced Usage
- By analogy in computing and engineering: Any complex system or device where the internal processes are hidden or not understood, but the inputs and outputs are observable and known.
- For most users, a smartphone's processor is a black box; they use it without knowing how it works.
- In psychology and philosophy: Refers to theories of mind that treat cognitive processes as unknown, focusing only on stimuli (input) and behavior (output).
Variants and Related Words
- Flight recorder: The more formal and precise term for an aircraft's black box.
- Event data recorder (EDR): The term often used for similar devices in automobiles.
- Black-box testing (noun/adjective): A method of software testing where the internal structure/design is unknown to the tester.
Synonyms
- Flight recorder
- Data recorder
- Crash recorder
Related Idioms and Phrases
- "Black box model": A conceptual model that views a system primarily in terms of its inputs and outputs, with no knowledge of its internal workings.
- The economist treated the consumer market as a black box model, analyzing spending habits without detailing individual psychology.
- "To treat something as a black box": To use a system or device without concern for its internal mechanisms.
- You don't need to be an engineer to drive a car; you can treat it as a black box.
Noun
- equipment that records information about the performance of an aircraft during flight