scholarly journals Toward a Multi-Scale Computational Model of Arterial Adaptation in Hypertension: Verification of a Multi-Cell Agent Based Model

2011 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bryan C. Thorne ◽  
Heather N. Hayenga ◽  
Jay D. Humphrey ◽  
Shayn M. Peirce
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Setzler ◽  
Robert Goldstone

Humans have a remarkable capacity for coordination. Our ability to interact and act jointly in groups is crucial to our success as a species. Joint Action (JA) research has often concerned itself with simplistic behaviors in highly constrained laboratory tasks. But there has been a growing interest in understanding complex coordination in more open-ended contexts. In this regard, collective music improvisation has emerged as a fascinating model domain for studying basic JA mechanisms in an unconstrained and highly sophisticated setting. A number of empirical studies have begun to elucidate coordination mechanisms underlying joint musical improvisation, but these empirical findings have yet to be cached out in a working computational model. The present work fills this gap by presenting TonalEmergence, an idealized agent-based model of improvised musical coordination. TonalEmergence models the coordination of notes played by improvisers to generate harmony (i.e., tonality), by simulating agents that stochastically generate notes biased towards maximizing harmonic consonance given their partner's previous notes. The model replicates an interesting empirical result from a previous study of professional jazz pianists: that feedback loops of mutual adaptation between interacting agents support the production of consonant harmony. The model is further explored to show how complex tonal dynamics, such as the production and dissolution of stable tonal centers, are supported by agents that are characterized by 1) a tendency to strive toward consonance, 2) stochasticity, and 3) a limited memory for previously played notes. TonalEmergence thus provides a grounded computational model to simulate and probe the coordination mechanisms underpinning one of the more remarkable feats of human cognition: collective music improvisation.


Biosystems ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 206 ◽  
pp. 104450
Author(s):  
Sounak Sadhukhan ◽  
P.K. Mishra ◽  
S.K. Basu ◽  
J.K. Mandal

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annalisa Minelli ◽  
Cyril Tissot ◽  
Mathias Rouan ◽  
Matthieu Le Tixerant

This short paper presents an example of integration between open source Geographical Information System (GIS) and Agent Based Model (ABM) in order to better simulate fishing activities on Iroise Sea (Brittany, France). This work makes part of the SIMARIS project: a simulation prototype that integrate multi-source and multi-scale spatiotemporal constraints as forcing variable in order to assess the intensity and the variability of marine activities. A pre-processing step, executed in batch in GRASS GIS, aims to calculate data for initialization and simulation step, then the Agent Based simulation is launched (in batch) on GAMA platform. All these operations are scheduled in a Python script to perform pre-processing and simulation. The work presents an example of integration from a geographical point of view. The technical improvements are detailed and the potentials of such integrated solution are discussed.


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