CSSS 2009 Santa Fe-Projects & Working Groups: Difference between revisions
From Santa Fe Institute Events Wiki
No edit summary |
|||
| Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
[[Image:Flu_cases.png |thumb|Actual number of swine flu cases over the same period|left]] | [[Image:Flu_cases.png |thumb|Actual number of swine flu cases over the same period|left]] | ||
While the number of flu cases increased, the searches died off, as interest in the topic waned. It would be interesting to follow the origin, spread and extinction of media hype, maybe applying models commonly used to study the spread of disease. [[Alexander Mikheyev]]<br style="clear:both" /> | While the number of flu cases increased, the searches died off, as interest in the topic waned. It would be interesting to follow the origin, spread and extinction of media hype, maybe applying models commonly used to study the spread of disease. [[Alexander Mikheyev]]<br style="clear:both" /> | ||
[[Alhaji Cherif]]<br style="clear:both"/> you could look at the dynamics from agent-based (ABM) perspective. There is a recent paper by Epstein and colleague that focuses on the impact of fear on disease from agent-based perspective, but does not capture this dynamics. However, my collaborator and I are currently writing a paper on the same problem you just outline from mathematical epidemiological perspective. Our results show some interesting dynamics. I think its extension in ABM might provide richer dynamics. | |||
*[[Image:Phoenix.jpg|thumb|Change in Phoenix home prices. Source: NYT|left]] | *[[Image:Phoenix.jpg|thumb|Change in Phoenix home prices. Source: NYT|left]] | ||
'''Housing prices.''' The New York Times has a set of [http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2007/08/25/business/20070826_HOUSING_GRAPHIC.html?scp=3&sq=home%20prices%20graphic&st=cse dramatic graphs] showing the rise and fall of home prices in select cities. Again these graphs reminded me a bit of those produced by [http://www.math.duke.edu/education/ccp/materials/postcalc/sir/sir2.html susceptible-infected-recovered] models of disease spread. Maybe there is something to it? Or maybe this phenomenon is already well understood by economists? [[Alexander Mikheyev]]<br style="clear:both" /> | '''Housing prices.''' The New York Times has a set of [http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2007/08/25/business/20070826_HOUSING_GRAPHIC.html?scp=3&sq=home%20prices%20graphic&st=cse dramatic graphs] showing the rise and fall of home prices in select cities. Again these graphs reminded me a bit of those produced by [http://www.math.duke.edu/education/ccp/materials/postcalc/sir/sir2.html susceptible-infected-recovered] models of disease spread. Maybe there is something to it? Or maybe this phenomenon is already well understood by economists? [[Alexander Mikheyev]]<br style="clear:both" /> | ||
*'''Movie Turnouts''' Which would be the more popular movie -- a combination of Steven Spielberg, Eddie Murphy and Gwyneth Paltrow, or Woody Allen, Dwayne 'the rock' Johnson, and Tom Cruise? Using the adaptation and turnout models presented by Nathan Collins, could we construct a prediction for gross movie receipts or even movie ratings? [[Nathan Hodas]] | *'''Movie Turnouts''' Which would be the more popular movie -- a combination of Steven Spielberg, Eddie Murphy and Gwyneth Paltrow, or Woody Allen, Dwayne 'the rock' Johnson, and Tom Cruise? Using the adaptation and turnout models presented by Nathan Collins, could we construct a prediction for gross movie receipts or even movie ratings? [[Nathan Hodas]] | ||
Revision as of 07:20, 11 June 2009
| CSSS Santa Fe 2009 |
Brainstorming
- Disease ecology of media hype. How much and event gets covered in the news often appears to depends on how much it is already covered in the news. Often this distorts reality. For example, the number of searches for "swine flu" (a proxy for media hype), do not reflect the patterns of disease spread over the same period.


While the number of flu cases increased, the searches died off, as interest in the topic waned. It would be interesting to follow the origin, spread and extinction of media hype, maybe applying models commonly used to study the spread of disease. Alexander Mikheyev
Alhaji Cherif
you could look at the dynamics from agent-based (ABM) perspective. There is a recent paper by Epstein and colleague that focuses on the impact of fear on disease from agent-based perspective, but does not capture this dynamics. However, my collaborator and I are currently writing a paper on the same problem you just outline from mathematical epidemiological perspective. Our results show some interesting dynamics. I think its extension in ABM might provide richer dynamics.
Housing prices. The New York Times has a set of dramatic graphs showing the rise and fall of home prices in select cities. Again these graphs reminded me a bit of those produced by susceptible-infected-recovered models of disease spread. Maybe there is something to it? Or maybe this phenomenon is already well understood by economists? Alexander Mikheyev
- Movie Turnouts Which would be the more popular movie -- a combination of Steven Spielberg, Eddie Murphy and Gwyneth Paltrow, or Woody Allen, Dwayne 'the rock' Johnson, and Tom Cruise? Using the adaptation and turnout models presented by Nathan Collins, could we construct a prediction for gross movie receipts or even movie ratings? Nathan Hodas

