Conference Agenda
Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
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Daily Overview |
| 8:30am - 9:30am |
Registration Desk is Open |
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| 9:30am - 12:30pm |
ESSA@Work - morning session Location: Calman CLC202 Chair: Aytalina Kulichkina Chair: Samuel Ugo Ringier ESSA@work participants present a model they are working on to gather feedback and suggestions to improve, adapt and/or extend their model. |
Short introduction to the GAMA platform Location: Calman CLC203 Chair: Kevin Chapuis GAMA is an easy-to-use open-source modelling and simulation environment for creating spatially explicit agent-based simulations. This workshop introduces the platform, the dedicated language called Gaml, and its resources (online documentation, tutorials, and more) to help you start your project powered by Gama. Requirements: Laptop with capacity to install GAMA |
Simulation-Based Inference for Complex Social Models Location: Calman CLC407 Chair: Valerii Chirkov This three-hour workshop (using Python) introduces participants to simulation-based inference and its applications to complex social models, bridging the gap between agent-based simulations and experimental research. |
Emerging Practices in Science Communication for Social Simulation Location: Extra workshop room 1 Chair: Rok Novak Chair: Zuzanna Kurowska Organisers: Rok Novak, Zuzanna Kurowska, Deniz Sirin Communicating social simulation research poses specific challenges, from explaining model structure and assumptions to conveying uncertainty and relevance to non-expert audiences. Building on the goals of a proposed Special Interest Group within the European Social Simulation Association, the workshop combines shared exploration with emerging guidance. |
Ethnographic methods and Social Simulations Location: Extra workshop room 2 Chair: Frank Dignum Chair: Bruce Edmonds Chair: Cezara-Maria Pastrav Organisers: Bruce Edmonds, Cezara Pastrav, Sofia Karlsson, Frank Dignum There has been a long standing workshop and track on Qual2Quant where people discuss the use of qualitative data for Social Simulations. In this workshop we want to build on this and look specifically how ethnographic methods can be used to develop social simulations. |
| 12:30pm - 2:00pm |
Lunch Location: Cafe |
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| 2:00pm - 5:00pm |
ESSA@Work - afternoon session Location: Calman CLC202 Chair: Aytalina Kulichkina Chair: Samuel Ugo Ringier ESSA@work participants present a model they are working on to gather feedback and suggestions to improve, adapt and/or extend their model. |
GIS use in GAMA Location: Calman CLC203 Chair: Kevin Chapuis GAMA is an easy-to-use open-source modelling and simulation environment for creating spatially explicit agent-based simulations. This workshop introduces how to use GIS data for simulation in GAMA. During this 3-hour workshop, a model of urban mobility & planning will support the training based on Gaml reusable building blocks. Requirements: Laptop with capacity to install GAMA (and attendance at introduction workshop or equivalent experience) |
From Aggregate Network Summaries to Synthetic Networked Populations Location: Calman CLC407 Chair: Aditya S. Khanna Chair: Jonathan Ozik Reproducible Workflows for Social Simulation Leveraging Exponential Random Graph Models (ERGMs) for Agent-Based Models (ABMs) Requirements: Familiarity with logistic regression, experience fitting logistic model in R will help. |
Models of Human Decision: Exchange Hub Location: Extra workshop room 1 Chair: Loïs Vanhée Chair: Melania Borit Chair: Blanca Luque Capellas Models of human decision (MOODs) are a central component of agent-based social simulation (ABSS) that raises a variety of open ended questions investigated by the ABSS community as well as by connected ones (e.g., affective computing, intelligent virtual agents). This workshop is meant to discuss practical insights based on experience or joint interests and aspects on which members of our community could collaborate. |
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