default search action
2. EPOS 2006: Brescia, Italy
- Flaminio Squazzoni:
Epistemological Aspects of Computer Simulation in the Social Sciences, Second International Workshop, EPOS 2006, Brescia, Italy, October 5-6, 2006, Revised Selected and Invited Papers. Lecture Notes in Computer Science 5466, Springer 2009, ISBN 978-3-642-01108-5 - Ulrich Frank, Flaminio Squazzoni, Klaus G. Troitzsch:
EPOS-Epistemological Perspectives on Simulation: An Introduction. 1-11
Invited Papers
- G. Nigel Gilbert, Petra Ahrweiler:
The Epistemologies of Social Simulation Research. 12-28 - Rosaria Conte:
From Simulation to Theory (and Backward). 29-47
Selected Papers
- Scott Moss:
Talking about ABSS: Functional Descriptions of Models. 48-59 - Alex Schmid:
What Does Emergence in Computer Simulations? Simulation between Epistemological and Ontological Emergence. 60-68 - Martin Neumann:
Emergence as an Explanatory Principle in Artificial Societies. Reflection on the Bottom-Up Approach to Social Theory. 69-88 - Camille Roth:
Reconstruction Failures: Questioning Level Design. 89-98 - Nicholas Mark Gotts, J. Gareth Polhill:
Narrative Scenarios, Mediating Formalisms, and the Agent-Based Simulation of Land Use Change. 99-116 - Nuno David:
Validation and Verification in Social Simulation: Patterns and Clarification of Terminology. 117-129 - Paul Ormerod, Bridget Rosewell:
Validation and Verification of Agent-Based Models in the Social Sciences. 130-140 - Tobias Lorenz:
Abductive Fallacies with Agent-Based Modeling and System Dynamics. 141-152 - Jim Doran:
Algorithmic Analysis of Production Systems Used as Agent-Based Social Simulation Models. 153-168 - Bruce Edmonds:
The Nature of Noise. 169-182
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.