found: Work cat.: Bloy, L.A.K. An investigation into Braess' paradox, 2007:p. i (Braess' paradox is a counter-intuitive phenomenon which can occur in congesting networks; introduction of a new link in the network results in the total travel time on the network increasing) p. 1 (occurs when additional capacity is added to a road network)
found: Wikipedia, Sept. 21, 2009(Braess' paradox, credited to the mathematician Dietrich Braess; an extension of the road network may cause redistribution of the traffic that results in longer individual running times)
found: Acta Press website, Sept. 28, 2009(Braess paradox is a famous example of paradoxical cases where adding capacity to a network degrades the performance of all users. This study examines numerically some examples around the Braess-like paradox in a distributed computer system)
found: Expert Voices website, Sept. 28, 2009(Braess Paradox; model examines queuing theory)