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Collaborators Ben Ashpole Andy Jones Marco Janssen

The Paths that Groups Make Robert Goldstone Indiana University Department of Psychology Program in Cognitive Science. Collaborators Ben Ashpole Andy Jones Marco Janssen Allen Lee Winter Mason Michael Roberts. Collective Behavior as a Complex System.

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Collaborators Ben Ashpole Andy Jones Marco Janssen

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  1. The Paths that Groups MakeRobert GoldstoneIndiana UniversityDepartment of PsychologyProgram in Cognitive Science Collaborators Ben Ashpole Andy Jones Marco Janssen Allen Lee Winter Mason Michael Roberts

  2. Collective Behavior as a Complex System • Individual versus group perspectives • Collective phenomena: creation of currency, transportation systems, rumors, the web, resource harvesting, crowding, scientific communities • Compare group behavior experiments with agent-based computational models • Concrete and abstract path forging and following • Collective path formation • The dissemination of innovations in a social network

  3. Group Choice • Collective Behavior as a Complex System • People in groups often times make similar choices • People in a group are similar • Normative conformity (Deutsch & Gerard, 1955) • Early choosers change the environment for later choosers • Taking advantage of predecessors’ choices • Advantages to choosing popular choices: VHS, Microsoft, QWERTYIOP • Standing on the shoulders of giants: Moore’s law • Evolution of path systems: activity facilitates further activity

  4. Technological advances build on previous advances

  5. Emergence of Path Systems • What trails do people spontaneously create? • Dwight Eisenhower’s “grassroots” architectural philosophy • Previous paths are attractive: easier, low cognitive cost “Traveler, there is no path. Paths are made by walking.” -- Antonio Machado

  6. Activity leads to more Activity

  7. Comparison to optimal path systems • Minimal Steiner Tree (MST) = the set of paths that connects a set of nodes using the minimal amount of total path length • Steiner points = nodes added to original set of nodes • Always have 3 pathways, with each pair of adjacent pathways at 120o angle (Fermat, 17th century) • Applications in integrated circuit design, airport hub locations, internet routing, cable layout • Finding MST solutions is an NP-hard problem • Yet soap film naturally approximate MST solutions • Can people approximate MSTs too?

  8. Minimal Spanning Tree Minimal Spanning Tree Minimal Steiner Tree Minimal Steiner Trees Minimal Steiner Tree

  9. Soap Film MSTs

  10. Group Path Formation Experiment • Interactive, multi-participant experiment • 34 Groups of 7-12 subjects • Instructed to move to randomly selected cities to earn points • Points earned for each destination city reached • Points deducted for each traveled spot • Travel cost for each spot inversely related to number of times spot was previously visited by all participants • Steps on a spot also diffuse to neighboring spots • Influence of previous steps decays with time • Cost of each spot visually coded by brightness • 6 configurations of cities • 5-minutes of travel for each configuration

  11. Participants see themselves as green triangles. Navigate by changing heading direction with left and right arrowsCities shown in blue, destination in greenOther participants shown as yellow dotsThe brighter a path, the lower its cost

  12. Video Viewer

  13. Equilateral Isosceles - Isosceles triangle shows more pro-Steiner deviation from bee-line pathways compared to equilateral triangle. - The largest distance savings of MST over spanning tree is for equilateral triangle - Having a large advantage of an optimal path is no guarantee that a group will find it.

  14. Large rectangle Small rectangle - Small rectangle shows more pro-Steiner deviation than large rectangle, despite having the same proportions. - Deviations from bee-line path may be produced if two paths are close enough to influence one another.

  15. Triangle Triangle with Steiner point - If include Steiner point, all other paths deviate toward the Steiner path.

  16. Canonical Obtuse Rotated Obtuse - Rotated obtuse shows more pro-Steiner deviation for long path than canonical obtuse. - People may be influenced by canonical directions, with horizontal paths more salient/attractive than angled paths (Regier & Carlson, 2001)

  17. Does not take into account intended destination -1.5 -2.6 For every trip of each participant, integrate deviations from bee-line paths 2.1

  18. -Greater pro-Steiner deviations from bee-line paths for Isosceles - Asymmetries in paths: deviations from bee-line paths preferred at end of trip than at beginning (Bailenson, Shum, & Uttal, 1998, 2000)

  19. -Greater pro-Steiner deviations for long path of rotated obtuse angle than canonical obtuse. - Asymmetries in paths: deviations from bee-line paths preferred at end of trip than at beginning

  20. Active Walker Model (Helbing, Keltsch, & Molnár, 1997) • - Walkers move to destinations, affecting their environment locally as they walk, facilitating subsequent travel for others. • Walkers compromise between taking the shortest way to their destination and using existing, strong trails. • Agent-based model using the Langevin equation for Brownian motion in a potential.

  21. Active Walker Model (Helbing, Keltsch, & Molnár, 1997) G(r,t)= Ground potential at location r at time t, reflecting comfort of walking G0 = natural ground condition T(r)= Durability of trails from regrowth I(r) = Intensity of vegetation clearing Gmax = maximum comfort of a location d = Dirac’s delta function. Only count agents a at location r

  22. Active Walker Model (Helbing, Keltsch, & Molnár, 1997) Vtr(ra,t)= trail potential = Attractiveness for agent a s(ra) = visibility at agent’s location Attractiveness based on ground potential and distance of location to agent a Integrate to find spatial average of ground potentials

  23. Active Walker Model (Helbing, Keltsch, & Molnár, 1997) ea(ra,t)= Walking direction of agent a da= next destination ra = gradient of the trail potential Direction determined by destination and the attractiveness of all locations

  24. Active walker model correctly predicts more pro-steiner deviation for isosceles than equilateral triangle, and greater deviation with passing time. For isosceles, the model correctly predicts the most deviation near the triangle point with the smallest angle.

  25. Model predicts greater deviation from bee-line paths if Steiner point is included as a destination.

  26. Active walker model predicts greater deviation from bee-line paths for small than large rectangle.

  27. Active walker model does not predict an influence of rotation on bee-line path deviations

  28. Incorporating Rotational Sensitivity by changing distance function: S=1, not 2

  29. Model can predict path asymmetries, but predicts them in opposite direction as actual results. It predicts great deviation from bee-line paths going from yellow to blue (or red) rather than going from blue to yellow.

  30. Original Model Revised Model Modeling human-like asymmetries: increase visibility,  , as distance to destination decreases

  31. Conclusion • Group behavior from a complex adaptive systems perspective • People take advantage of trails left by others • Group behavior, to a first approximation, is well modeled by an Active Walker Model • Accounts for differences in scales and topologies of destinations, influence of time, and approximate distribution of steps • Can fix discrepancies: direction of asymmetries, rotation invariance • Essential insight: people’s movements are a compromise between going to their destinations and going where the path is attractive

  32. Humans Groups as Complex Systems • Controlled, data-rich methods for studying human group behavior as complex adaptive systems • Less messy than real world data, but still rich enough to find emergent group phenomena • Bridge between modeling work and empirical tests • Future Applications • Resource allocation • Group coordination • Coalition formation • Social dilemmas and common pool resource problems • Group polarization and creation of sub-groups in matters of taste • Social specialization and division of labor • http:/groups.psych.indiana.edu/

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