Introduction to Ecological Analysis: Difference between revisions
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I hope it is helpful. ^_^[[Wenyun Zuo]] | I hope it is helpful. ^_^[[Wenyun Zuo]] | ||
Wenyun - Thank you for the page. I've actually seen these equations before in combat modeling. In international relations, similar models called Lanchester Equations have used with mixed results. See [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanchester's_laws] if you are interested. | |||
Also, checkout the "docked" version of the system dynamics and agent based models of predator-prey models in Netlogo. Its fascinating to see how the different methodologies can get different results modeling the same problem (hint: you'll need additional information in order for the ABM to replicate the oscillations of the system dynamics model). See [http://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/models/WolfSheepPredation(docked)]. |
Revision as of 02:00, 8 June 2007
I'm looking for anyone who can provide a good introduction to ecology and ecological analysis. My research is on competition within the international system, and I would like to get a better understanding of how to analyze and theorize international politics as an evolving ecosystem. If anyone wants to take a shot a explaining this stuff to a social scientist please let me know.
Aaron
There a popular competitive equation used in ecology--Competitive Lotka-Volterra equations
I hope it is helpful. ^_^Wenyun Zuo
Wenyun - Thank you for the page. I've actually seen these equations before in combat modeling. In international relations, similar models called Lanchester Equations have used with mixed results. See [1] if you are interested.
Also, checkout the "docked" version of the system dynamics and agent based models of predator-prey models in Netlogo. Its fascinating to see how the different methodologies can get different results modeling the same problem (hint: you'll need additional information in order for the ABM to replicate the oscillations of the system dynamics model). See [2].