How new concepts become universal scientific approaches: insights from citation network analysis of agent-based complex systems science
Authored by Christian E Vincenot
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2017.2360
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Abstract
Progress in understanding and managing complex systems comprised of
decision-making agents, such as cells, organisms, ecosystems or
societies, is-like many scientific endeavours-limited by disciplinary
boundaries. These boundaries, however, are moving and can actively be
made porous or even disappear. To study this process, I advanced an
original bibliometric approach based on network analysis to track and
understand the development of the model-based science of agent-based
complex systems (ACS). I analysed research citations between the two
communities devoted to ACS research, namely agent-based (ABM) and
individual-based modelling (IBM). Both terms refer to the same approach,
yet the former is preferred in engineering and social sciences, while
the latter prevails in natural sciences. This situation provided a
unique case study for grasping how a new concept evolves distinctly
across scientific domains and how to foster convergence into a universal
scientific approach. The present analysis based on novel heterocitation
metrics revealed the historical development of ABM and IBM, confirmed
their past disjointedness, and detected their progressive merger. The
separation between these synonymous disciplines had silently opposed the
free flow of knowledge among ACS practitioners and thereby hindered the
transfer of methodological advances and the emergence of general systems
theories. A surprisingly small number of key publications sparked the
ongoing fusion between ABM and IBM research. Beside reviews raising
awareness of broad-spectrum issues, generic protocols for model
formulation and boundary-transcending inference strategies were critical
means of science integration. Accessible broad-spectrum software
similarly contributed to this change. From the modelling viewpoint, the
discovery of the unification of ABM and IBM demonstrates that a wide
variety of systems substantiate the premise of ACS research that
microscale behaviours of agents and system-level dynamics are
inseparably bound.
Tags
Individual-based model
models
Dynamics
Simulations
patterns
systems science
Reductionism
Protocol
Ecological theory
Mechanistic simulation
Bibliographic
network
Science integration