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3rd International Workshop on Agent-Based Modelling of Human Behaviour (ABMHuB’21)
Deadline: 30 April 2021
Call for Papers
A workshop on modelling and human social systems will be held virtually in conjunction with the 2021 Conference on Artificial Life (ALIFE 2021).
Agent-based modelling has a long history of success in many related fields from economics and cooperative behaviours, to social conflict, civil violence and revolution. ABMHuB brings together researchers who are interested in using agent-based modelling to understand human behaviour. It is a combination of agent-based modelling and behavioural science, which is a growing area of research. The motivation behind this workshop is to improve our understanding of collective human behaviour and address significant issues that are affecting the human population today, such as climate change, pandemic and misinformation.
Contributions are invited in all areas relating to the modelling of human behaviour and organisational behaviour, and understanding, evaluating, or making use of findings in behavioural science and psychology. Discussions of practical applications, ethical implications, and use cases from industry are also welcome.
Topics include:
* Agent-based modelling of human behaviour and organisational behaviour
* ALife models of individual behaviour, diversity, and group performance
* ALife models of human communication, trust, conflict, and conflict resolution
* ALife models of collaboration, cooperation, competition
* Agent-based modelling of economic paradigms such as negotiation and bargaining, games, auctions, markets
* Agent-based modelling of location behaviour, spatial patterns, geographical systems, urban evacuation, driver route choices, traffic flows, transport logistics
* Agent-based modelling of human systems such as smart grids, app stores, economies
* ALife models of the emergent effect and propagation of communication in human systems
* Use of agent-based modelling to evaluate or understand existing findings in behavioural science and psychology
* Incentives, reward structures, reinforcement learning
* Collective intelligence, teamwork, coalition, distributed problem solving
* Social networks, socio-technical systems
* ALife models of social media and spread of misinformation
* Epidemiology and spread of diseases
* Social simulation, interactive simulation and emergent behaviour
* Education technology, personalised teaching and training.
Two forms of submissions will be accepted (MIT Press format):
* Extended abstracts of length 2 pages.
* Research papers of length 6 pages.
Papers should be submitted by email to: [log in to unmask] by the deadline of: 30 April 2021.
For more information, see: http://abmhub.cs.ucl.ac.uk/2021/
Organising Committee:
* Dr Soo Ling Lim (Department of Computer Science, UCL)
* Professor Peter J. Bentley (Department of Computer Science, UCL)
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