Digital morphogenesis via Schelling segregation
Authored by George Barmpalias, Richard Elwes, Andrew Lewis-Pye
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6544/aaa493
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
Schelling's model of segregation looks to explain the way in which
particles or agents of two types may come to arrange themselves
spatially into configurations consisting of large homogeneous clusters,
i.e. connected regions consisting of only one type. As one of the
earliest agent based models studied by economists and perhaps the most
famous model of self-organising behaviour, it also has direct links to
areas at the interface between computer science and statistical
mechanics, such as the Ising model and the study of contagion and
cascading phenomena in networks.
While the model has been extensively studied it has largely resisted
rigorous analysis, prior results from the literature generally
pertaining to variants of the model which are tweaked so as to be
amenable to standard techniques from statistical mechanics or stochastic
evolutionary game theory. In Brandt et al (2012 Proc. 44th Annual ACM
Symp. on Theory of Computing) provided the first rigorous analysis of
the unperturbed model, for a specific set of input parameters. Here we
provide a rigorous analysis of the model's behaviour much more generally
and establish some surprising forms of threshold behaviour, notably the
existence of situations where an increased level of intolerance for
neighbouring agents of opposite type leads almost certainly to decreased
segregation.
Tags
Segregation
Schelling Model
Ising model
phase transitions
Model
residential segregation
Unperturbed dynamics
Stochastic system