Models are, by construction, simplifications of reality, but some simplifications have important consequences for urban studies and policy making, especially when their users are unaware of the original design choices of the models, which can happen when the urban model is very complex or has reached a “classical” status.
What are the unforeseen consequences of urban models’ simplification on our understanding of cities?
11 speakers
8 models
4 topics addressed:
- what is the model doing?
- what is its biography?
- how did it influence urban studies?
- how did it influence policy?
90-minute online seminars
edited into 45-min podcasts
... coming article
Objectives:
> understand the context of modelling choices
> understand the effect of translation and transfer across disciplines.
Historical contingency in circulation of analytical urban models
> WWII in reception of central place theory or Schelling model
Depends on skills and resources available
> computer development (Forrester), analytical optimisation for utility models
> Knowing contingent elements to limit/control/update their propagation in urban studies and policy
Dynamics of power & individual biographies
> Attributes of power (English, western institution, discipline) to diffuse urban models
Politics of translation and unintended effect
> Partial and total language translations, concepts and disciplinary translations
Different appropriation by discipline
> use cases and meaning of Alonso's model or Economic Base theory for economists and geographers
Generative simulation models have been "promising" for a long time now. They get even more "promising" with the development of big data and HPC. However, the process of building them is wasteful and suboptimal. The wheel gets reinvented instead of cumulative knowledge building and real theory development.
What are the obstacles to a cumulative development of geosimulation models?
What can be done about it?
Collective modelling experience in a multidisciplinary team tackling a similar question (2011-2015):
how to model urbanisation and the development of different urban systems over time?
Reflections and discussions from a recurring workshop on theory-building gathering agent-based modellers from various disciplinary fields (2017-2022)
1. Awareness of existing models
> time, search, publication
2. Readability of the models
> language, architectures, entities, processes, etc.
3. Access to the models
> openness, archive, versions
4. Data
> access, usage, compability
5. Incompatibilities
> conceptual, technical, purpose, scales
A geosimulation meta-language
“We are going to go out on a limb and argue for a geosimulation metalanguage, which can present the model’s algorithms, as well as the characteristics important for model dynamics, as an exact sequence of model events, synchronous/asynchronous updating, criteria of self-organization involved, etc. [...] Currently, the cogs of the simulation infrastructure—if not the entire wheel—are being reinvented over and over by different groups, simultaneously. If converged to a common denominator, these attempts can give birth to such a language.”
1. Model reviews
> attentive to polysemy of concepts and diversity of disciplinary traditions tackling the same process
2. Version-tracking development
> crediting past contributions and focusing on evaluation/exploration
3. Modular infrastructure
> reusable building blocks. Assembly as theoretical labour
4. Painless integration
> of blocks, analysis methods, computing capabilities, viz, etc.
Create unexpected combination of rules
Create a complete universe of mechanism interactions
Batty M., 2022, "Forrester's Urban Dynamics & cities as systems", Urban Models Seminar, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yYPO4qFjJ_E
Benenson, I., & Torrens, P. (2004). Geosimulation: Automata-based modeling of urban phenomena. John Wiley & Sons.
Cottineau C., 2022, "Generative modelling" In. Harris R., Heppenstall A., Wolf L., A Research Agenda for Spatial Analysis, Elgar.
Cottineau, C., Reuillon, R., Chapron, P., Rey-Coyrehourcq, S., & Pumain, D. (2015). A modular modelling framework for hypotheses testing in the simulation of urbanisation. Systems, 3(4), 348-377.
Delloye J., 2021, "Alonso's model and urban centrality", Urban Models Seminar, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pfyuv9pf6Wo
Ferretti, F. (2021). History and philosophy of geography II: Rediscovering individuals, fostering interdisciplinarity and renegotiating the ‘margins’. Progress in Human Geography, 45(4), 890-901.
Hegselmann, R. (2017). Thomas C. Schelling and James M. Sakoda: The intellectual, technical, and social history of a model. Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, 20(3).
Heppenstall, A. J., Crooks, A. T., See, L. M., & Batty, M. (Eds.). (2011). Agent-based models of geographical systems. Springer Science & Business Media.
Lerousseau J., 2021, "Economic Base Theory and urban development", Urban Models Seminar, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E8FSJmlALpM
Lorscheid, I., Berger, U., Grimm, V., & Meyer, M. (2019). From cases to general principles: A call for theory development through agent-based modeling. Ecological Modelling, 393, 153-156
Pumain D., 2021, "Central Place Theory and urban hierarchies", Urban Models Seminar, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YdB4e39EZEc
Pumain, D., & Reuillon, R. (2017). Urban dynamics and simulation models. Cham: Springer International Publishing
Radeff, A. (2019). Walter Christaller traduit en chinois (1998-2010). Cybergeo: European Journal of Geography.
Sarkar S., 2022, "Utilitarian models & urban resource allocation", Urban Model Seminar, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5eUJyxLwnk0
Vu, T.M., Buckley, C., Bai, H., Nielsen, A., Probst, C., Brennan, A., Shuper, P., Strong, M. and Purshouse, R.C., 2020. Multiobjective genetic programming can improve the explanatory capabilities of mechanism-based models of social systems. Complexity, 2020.
c.cottineau@tudelft.nl
@ClementineCttn