Simulation vs. Definition: Differing Approaches to Setting Probabilities for Agent Behaviour
Authored by Fraser J Morgan, Philip Brown, Adam J Daigneault
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.3390/land4040914
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Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
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Abstract
While geographers and economists regularly work together on the
development of land-use and land-cover change models, research on how
differences in their modelling approaches affects the results is rare.
Answering calls for more coordination between the two disciplines in
order to build models that better represent the real world, we (two
economists and a geographer) developed an economically grounded, spatially explicit, agent-based model to explore the effects of
environmental policy on rural land use in New Zealand. This
inter-disciplinary collaboration raised a number of differences in
modelling approach. One key difference, and the focus of this paper, is
the way in which processes that shape the behaviour of agents are
integrated within the model. Using the model and a nationally
representative survey, we compare the land-use effects of two
disciplinary-aligned approaches to setting a farmer agent's likelihood
of land-use conversion. While we anticipated that the approaches would
significantly affect model outcomes, at a catchment scale they produced
similar trends and results. However, further analysis at a sub-catchment
scale suggests the approach to setting the likelihood of land-use
conversion does matter. While the results outlined here will not fully
resolve the disciplinary differences, they do outline the need to
account for heterogeneity in the predicted agent behaviours for both
disciplines.
Tags
Social networks
multiagent systems
Land-use change
Human decisions
Agricultural technology adoption
Economic-models
Natural systems
Water-quality
Special-issue
Cover change