SimulPast -- Simulating the Past to Understand Human Behaviour
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 80th Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA (2015)
Social and environmental transitions represent key aspects to better understand human behaviour. From a complex systems perspective, the most decisive questions about human societal systems are related to the transitions between phases of equilibrium. Therefore, the study of these transitions is extremely interesting in order to move forward with our current understanding of human behaviour at macro, meso and micro-level. In that respect, ancient societies present a great opportunity to build a virtual laboratory in which to model, explore and simulate different hypotheses and theories about social and environmental transitions. This session will act as a showcase of the final results of the SimulPast project (www.simulpast.es). The philosophy on which SimulPast is based is transdisciplinary, evading the traditional division that sees the Humanities and Social Sciences and the often-called “Hard Sciences” as mutually impermeable areas of knowledge. Indeed, the research strategy on which the project has worked crossed many disciplinary boundaries to create a holistic approach.
Other Keywords
Simulation •
Resilience •
Land Use •
Cooperation •
Agent based modeling •
Neolithic transition •
game theory •
small scale societies •
competition and cooperation •
agent-based models
Geographic Keywords
South Asia •
South America •
East/Southeast Asia •
West Asia
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-7 of 7)
- Documents (7)
- Climate, resources and strategies: simulating prehistoric populations in semi-arid environments (2015)
- Cooperative practices in hunter-fisher-gatherers from Tierra del Fuego: a study on resource visibility and social sharing (2015)
- Embedding Artificial Intelligence in Agent-Based Models (2015)
- Land use patterns in the arid Eurasia. Models and historical examples (2015)
- Modelling group formation in small scale societies (2015)
- Neolithic transitions: demic or cultural? (2015)
- You go first. An agent-based model of mating-migration between early farming and foraging societies (2015)