Study Guide Flashcards
What is emergence?
The action of the whole is more that the sum of the parts
What are the defining characteristics of agents?
What are the defining characteristics of multi-agent systems?
What are agent-based models?
What are the advantages of ABM in comparison to equation based modeling
What are the disadvantages of ABM in comparison to equation based modelling?
What are the advantages of ABM in comparison to laboratory experiments?
What are the disadvantages of ABM in comparison to laboratory experiments?
When is an AMB a useful methodological tool?
- When cognitive function depends on the actions of other agents/environments
- When there is heterogeneity (diversity) within and between groups
- When time is a factor (change over time)
- When there is a spatial distribution
What are the uses of CogSci in ABMs?
- Calibration (provides parameterization)
- Validation (test predictions)
- Longitudinal question (e.g. evolution - culture - social norms)
- Ethical questions (scenarios that are not “ethical” to manipulate in real-life)
What are the 3 different approaches in Computational Social Science?
- Deductive (explain social science phenomena with math/computer science/logic-game theory)
- Generative (Generate theory and test it with data)
- Complex (combine complex systems methods with data science, machine learning etc.)
Under what circumstances are cognitive models developed?
Often developed based on cognition in isolation (lab experiments, surveys, settings with high control)
What is a generative model?
Generate a theory of behaviour by understanding the mechanisms that generates behaviour
What do generative models require?
- External mechanisms (environmental and social)
- Internal mechanisms (behavioural/ cognitive mechanisms)
What is a cognitive model?
Approximation of one or more cognitive processes in humans or other animals for the purposes of comprehension and prediction.