Responsiveness of Mining Community Acceptance Model to Key Parameter Changes
Authored by Mark Kofi Boateng, Kwame Awuah-Offei
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.18564/jasss.3458
Sponsors:
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Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
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Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
The mining industry has difficulties predicting changes in the level of
community acceptance of its projects over time. These changes are due to
changes in the society and individual perceptions around these mines as
a result of the mines' environmental and social impacts. Agent-based
modeling can be used to facilitate better understanding of how community
acceptance changes with changing mine environmental impacts. This work
investigates the sensitivity of an agent-based model (ABM) for
predicting changes in community acceptance of a mining project due to
information diffusion to key input parameters. Specifically, this study
investigates the responsiveness of the ABM to average degree (total
number of friends) of the social network, close neighbour ratio (a
measure of homophily in the social network) and number of early adopters
({''}innovators{''}). A two-level full factorial experiment was used to
investigate the sensitivity of the model to these parameters. The
primary (main), secondary and tertiary effects of each parameter were
estimated to assess the model's sensitivity. The results show that the
model is more responsive to close neighbour ratio and number of early
adopters than average degree. Consequently, uncertainty surrounding the
inferences drawn from simulation experiments using the agent-based model
will be minimized by obtaining more reliable estimates of close
neighbour ratio and number of early adopters. While it is possible to
reliably estimate the level of early adopters from the literature, the
degree of homophily (close neighbour ratio) has to be estimated from
surveys that can be expensive and unreliable. Further, work is required
to find economic ways to document relevant degrees of homophily in
social networks in mining communities.
Tags
Simulation
Agent-based modeling
Innovation
networks
diffusion
Sensitivity Analysis
systems
Bass model
Impacts
Industry
Mining
Mining community
Social license
Operate