Individual-based models are an exciting and widely used new tool for ecology. These computational models allow scientists to explore the mechanisms through which population and ecosystem ecology arises from how individuals interact with each other and their environment. This book provides the first
Individual-based Modeling and Ecology
β Scribed by Volker Grimm; Steven F. Railsback
- Publisher
- Princeton University Press
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 444
- Series
- Princeton Series in Theoretical and Computational Biology; 2
- Edition
- Course Book
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Individual-based models are an exciting and widely used new tool for ecology. These computational models allow scientists to explore the mechanisms through which population and ecosystem ecology arises from how individuals interact with each other and their environment. This book provides the first in-depth treatment of individual-based modeling and its use to develop theoretical understanding of how ecological systems work, an approach the authors call "individual-based ecology.?
Grimm and Railsback start with a general primer on modeling: how to design models that are as simple as possible while still allowing specific problems to be solved, and how to move efficiently through a cycle of pattern-oriented model design, implementation, and analysis. Next, they address the problems of theory and conceptual framework for individual-based ecology: What is "theory"? That is, how do we develop reusable models of how system dynamics arise from characteristics of individuals? What conceptual framework do we use when the classical differential equation framework no longer applies? An extensive review illustrates the ecological problems that have been addressed with individual-based models. The authors then identify how the mechanics of building and using individual-based models differ from those of traditional science, and provide guidance on formulating, programming, and analyzing models. This book will be helpful to ecologists interested in modeling, and to other scientists interested in agent-based modeling.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
PART 1. MODELING
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. A Primer to Modeling
Chapter 3. Pattern-oriented Modeling
PART 2. INDIVIDUAL-BASED ECOLOGY
Chapter 4. Theory in Individual-based Ecology
Chapter 5. A Conceptual Framework for Designing Individual-based Models
Chapter 6. Examples
PART 3. THE ENGINE ROOM
Chapter 7. Formulating Individual-based Models
Chapter 8. Software for Individual-based Models
Chapter 9. Analyzing Individual-based Models
Chapter 10. Communicating Individual-based Models and Research
PART 4. CONCLUSIONS AND OUTLOOK
Chapter 11. Using Analytical Models in Individual-based Ecology
Chapter 12. Conclusions and Outlook for Individual-based Ecology
Glossary
References
Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Population Ecology from the Individual Perspective.- Individual-Based Models: Combining Testability and Generality.- From the Individual to the Population in Demographic Models.- Techniques of Individual-Based Modeling.- Which Individual-Based Approach Is Most Appropriate For a Given Problem?.- The
Until fairly recently, populations were handled as homogenized averages, which made modelling feasible but which ignored the essential fact that in any population there is a great variety of individuals of different ages, sizes and degrees of fitness. Recently, because of the increased availability
The essential textbook on agent-based modeling--now fully updated and expanded Agent-Based and Individual-Based Modeling has become the standard textbook on the subject for classroom use and self-instruction. Drawing on the latest version of NetLogo and fully updated with new examples, exercises, an
Agent-based modeling is a new technique for understanding how the dynamics of biological, social, and other complex systems arise from the characteristics and behaviors of the agents making up these systems. This innovative textbook gives students and scientists the skills to design, implement, and
<p>Agent-based modeling is a new technique for understanding how the dynamics of biological, social, and other complex systems arise from the characteristics and behaviors of the agents making up these systems. This innovative textbook gives students and scientists the skills to design, implement, a