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School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT The Elements of a Computational Infrastructure for Social Simulation Mark Birkin 1, Rob Allan 2, Sean Beckhofer 3, Iain Buchan 4, June Finch 5, Carole Goble 3, Andy Hudson-Smith 6, Paul Lambert 7, Rob Procter 5, David de Roure 8, Richard Sinnott 9 [1] School of Geography, University of Leeds [2] STFC, Daresbury [3] School of Computer Science, University of Manchester [4] School of Medicine, University of Manchester [5] School of Social Sciences, University of Manchester [6] Centre for Applied Spatial Analysis, UCL [7] Applied Social Science, University of Stirling [8] Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton [9] NeSC, University of Glasgow 6649386
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Simulation of Epidemics Ferguson et al, Nature, 2006
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The El Farol Bar Problem Everyone wants to go the bar -unless it’s too crowded! Must relax neoclassical economic assumptions (homogeneity of preferences, simultaneous decision- making) Individual actors/ agent-based decision-making -generic template for real markets heterogeneous out of equilibrium (Arthur, 1994)
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Public Policy Source: MAPS2030
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2001 2031 2015 * Traffic Intensity=Traffic load/Road capacity Traffic Intensity * Transport…
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Social Simulation Applications Economics, geography, sociology Health sciences, politics, anthropology Methods Agent-based models Microsimulation Impact Theory to policy Analysis, projection, forecasting, scenarios
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Features of social simulation Widespread data requirements Plug-and-play simulation and analysis components Visualise complex outcomes Computationally demanding Need to reproduce and share results with a community of users
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Rationale for NeISS Growing demand for social simulation models Critical mass in NCeSS International collaboration with solid foundations Ongoing innovation Leverage existing investments in computation and data
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NeISS Architecture
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NeISS Portal
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School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
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Conclusion NeISS will: Combine research lifecycle elements within a unified social simulation infrastructure Leverage skills and relationships from the UK e- social science programme (NCeSS) Build user communities in both public policy and academia
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