Micro/macro viability analysis of individual-based models: Investigation into the viability of a stylized agricultural cooperative
Authored by Sophie Martin, Isabelle Alvarez, Jean-Daniel Kant
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1002/cplx.21604
Sponsors:
French national network of complex systems (RNSC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The mathematical viability theory proposes methods and tools to study at
a global level how controlled dynamical systems can be confined in a
desirable subset of the state space. Multilevel viability problems are
rarely studied since they induce combinatorial explosion (the set of N
agents each evolving in a p-dimensional state space, can evolve in a Np
dimensional state space). In this article, we propose an original
approach which consists in solving first local viability problems and
then studying the real viability of the combination of the local
strategies, by simulation where necessary. In this article, we consider
as multilevel viability problem a stylized agricultural cooperative
which has to keep a minimum of members. Members have an economical
constraint and some members have a simple model of the functioning of
the cooperative and make assumptions on other members' behavior, especially proviable agents which are concerned about their own
viability. In this framework, the model assumptions allow us to solve
the local viability problem at the agent level. At the cooperative
level, considering mixture of agents, simulation results indicate if and
when including proviable agents increases the viability of the whole
cooperative. (c) 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Tags
Sustainability
commons
systems
fisheries
games