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Tue 21 Feb, Tue 28 Feb 2017
14:00 - 18:00

Venue: 8 Mill Lane, Lecture Room 6

Provided by: Social Sciences Research Methods Programme


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Agent-based Modelling with Netlogo
Beginners

Tue 21 Feb, Tue 28 Feb 2017

Description

Societies can be viewed as path-dependent dynamical systems in which the interactions between multiple heterogeneous actors, and the institutions and organisations they create, lead to complex overlapping patterns of change over different space and time-scales. Agent-based models are exploratory tools for trying to understand some of this complexity. They use computational methods to represent individual people, households, organisations, or other types of agent, and help to make explicit the potential consequences of hypotheses about the way people act, interact and engage with their environment. These types of models have been used in fields as diverse as Architecture, Archaeology, Criminology, Economics, Epidemiology, Geography, and Sociology, covering all kinds of topics including social networks and formation of social norms, spatial distribution of criminal activity, spread of disease, issues in health and welfare, warfare and disasters, behaviour in stock-markets, land-use change, farming,forestry, fisheries, traffic flow, planning and development of cities, flooding and water management. This course introduces a popular freely available software tool, Netlogo, which is accessible to those with no initial programming experience, and shows how to use it to develop a variety of simple models so that students would be able to see how it might apply to their own research.

Target audience

This module is designed for MPhil and PhD students as part of the Social Science Research Methods Centre (SSRMC) training programme - a shared platform for providing research students with a broad range of quantitative and qualitative research methods skills that are relevant across the social sciences.

Prerequisites
Sessions

Number of sessions: 2

# Date Time Venue Trainer
1 Tue 21 Feb 2017   14:00 - 18:00 14:00 - 18:00 8 Mill Lane, Lecture Room 6 map Dr Mike Bithell
2 Tue 28 Feb 2017   14:00 - 18:00 14:00 - 18:00 8 Mill Lane, Lecture Room 6 map Dr Mike Bithell
Topics covered
  • Introduction to simulation in social systems; concepts involved in writing computer programs; outline of Netlogo and its capabilities; the user interface, documentation, adding buttons, patches and agents; using example code.
  • Following from session one, a set of examples will illustrate the techniques needed to make practical working programs, including illustrations of : Cellular automata; system dynamics; networks; gis; land use change.
Format

Presentation and practicals

Student Feedback

All students are expected to give feedback for each module they take...

At the end of each module, students will be sent a link to a very short evaluation form. They will also be able to find this link on the Moodle page for their course. The survey takes a few minutes to fill in, and can even be done on a mobile phone. Students that do not respond to the survey the first time, will receive regular automated reminders until the survey is completed.

Students will not be given certification or proof of attendance for any module for which they have not provided feedback.

Notes
  • To gain maximum benefits from the course it is important that students do not see this course in isolation from the other MPhil courses or research training they are taking.
  • Responsibility lies with each student to consider the potential for their own research using methods common in fields of the social sciences that may seem remote. Ideally this task will be facilitated by integration of the SSRMC with discipline-specific courses in their departments and through reading and discussion.
Duration

Two sessions of four hours each; eight hours in total

Frequency

Once a week for two weeks


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