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Re: [Swarm-Modelling] Models study in cooperation and competition
From: |
Rick Riolo |
Subject: |
Re: [Swarm-Modelling] Models study in cooperation and competition |
Date: |
Thu, 6 Mar 2003 06:37:11 -0500 (EST) |
ciao matteo,
You can find our various papers about the emergence
of cooperation off this page:
http://cscs.umich.edu/research/techReports.html
under the "CAR" project.
Another model which addresses a different kind of system
with a mixture of cooperative and comptetive elements
in a coordination setting is the "El Farol Bar Problem",
and the simpler version called the Minority Game (MG).
There are some papers about the MG on the
CSCS publications page as well.
- r
--
Rick Riolo address@hidden
Center for Study of Complex Systems (CSCS)
4477 Randall Lab
University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI 48109-1120
Phone: 734 763 3323 Fax: 734 763 9267
http://cscs.umich.edu/~rlr
On Thu, 6 Mar 2003, address@hidden wrote:
> Date: Thu, 6 Mar 2003 10:22:56 +0100
> From: "address@hidden" <address@hidden>
> Reply-To: address@hidden
> To: modelling <address@hidden>
> Subject: [Swarm-Modelling] Models study in cooperation and competition
>
> Hello, I am a PhD student at the University of Padova (Italy).
> I think that methodology and validation are two major problems
> in simulation models involving human behavior.
> In my thesis I would like to compare diffrent computational models
> in order to find some useful suggestion.
> Along with this two problem, another theme is the purpose intended
> for a grate number of simulation models.
> In short, instead of building the n-th simulation model I would like
> to compare critically different models with reguard to methodology,
> validation and purpose.
> Obviously, I need to restrict the area to a specific theme involving
> human behavior. So I will compare models about competition and
> cooperation. About this theme we find a lot of research even before
> the advent of computational modeling, so it will be possible to see
> the contribution of computational models as a new research method.
> My research will start from the well known Axelrod's models (see
> "the evolution of cooperation" and "the complexity of cooperation").
>
> If you have developed a model or know about other interesting
> exemples, please let me know.
>
> Thank you
> Matteo
>
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