• DocumentCode
    3399727
  • Title

    The effect of kinship cooperation learning strategy and culture on the resilience of social systems in the village multi-agent simulation

  • Author

    Kobti, Ziad ; Reynolds, Robert G. ; Kohler, Tim

  • Author_Institution
    Sch. of Comput. Sci., Windsor Univ., Ont., Canada
  • Volume
    2
  • fYear
    2004
  • fDate
    19-23 June 2004
  • Firstpage
    1743
  • Abstract
    The multi-agent village simulation was initially developed to examine the settlement and farming practices of prehispanic Pueblo Indians of the Central Mesa Verde region of Southwest Colorado (Kohler, 2000; Kohler et al.). The original model of Kohler was used to examine whether drought alone was responsible for the departure of the prehispanic Puebloan people from the Four Corners region after 700 years of occupation. The results suggested that other factors besides precipitation were important. We then proceeded to add economic factors into the simulation, first allowing agents to engage in reciprocal exchanges between kin. This resulted in larger populations, more complex social networks, and more resilient systems. However, the exchange was done randomly and individuals did not remember the transactions. In This work we explicitly embed the reciprocal exchange process within a cultural algorithm, where individual agents can remember individuals that they have cooperated with. Also, in the cultural space the group can learn generalizations about what kind of relative is likely to successfully respond to a request. These generalizations are used to drive changes in requestor behavior. The results of this approach produced an even larger and more complex system exhibiting greater dependence on hub nodes that are sensitive to precipitation.
  • Keywords
    demography; evolutionary computation; large-scale systems; learning (artificial intelligence); multi-agent systems; simulation; social sciences; Central Mesa Verde region; complex social networks; cultural algorithm; economic factors; hub nodes; kinship cooperation learning strategy; precipitation; prehispanic Pueblo Indians; reciprocal exchange process; social system resilience; village multiagent simulation; Computational modeling; Computer science; Computer simulation; Cultural differences; Economics; Global communication; History; Remuneration; Resilience; Social network services;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Evolutionary Computation, 2004. CEC2004. Congress on
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-8515-2
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/CEC.2004.1331106
  • Filename
    1331106