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Changing%20the%20Rules%20of%20the%20Game

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Title: An Immune System Perspective on Managing Biological Invasions Author: peet Last modified by: Peder Created Date: 11/7/2000 3:32:41 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Changing%20the%20Rules%20of%20the%20Game


1
Changing the Rules of the Game
  • Dr. Marco A. Janssen
  • Department of Spatial Economics

2
Research questions
  • How do rules emerge, get selected and be
    remembered in social ecological systems?
  • What can we learn from (computational models of)
    immune systems and language development?

3
Contents
  • Puzzles from empirical studies of common pool
    resources.
  • Immune system
  • Language development
  • Methodology
  • Modeling self-organization of institutions
  • Discussion

4
Common Pool Resources
  • Are used by multiple-users
  • For which joint use involves subtractability,
    that is, use by one user will subtract benefits
    from another users enjoyment of the resource
  • It is difficult to exclude users

5
Management of CPRs
  • Economic Theory predicts Nash equilibrium and
    overharvesting
  • Solutions to derive cooperative solution
  • Government will manage the resource
  • A market will be created
  • Laboratory experiments and field studies show an
    alternative self-organization of institutions.

6
Factors important for self-organization
  • Type of communication
  • Building up mutual trust relationships
  • Rules how to monitor and sanction defined by the
    local users and implemented by local users
  • Memory of successful solutions by taboos,
    rituals, religions, etc.

7
Immune System
  • Distributed system which is able to detect and
    eliminate invasions of pathogens.
  • Detection self vs non-self
  • Response generation antibodies
  • Memory storing successful responses

8
Pathogens
  • Bacteria
  • Parasites
  • Viruses
  • Fungi

9
Detection
10
Recognition
11
Response
  • - Continue generation of new cells.
  • - Replication of cells which bind lots of
    pathogens Antibodies
  • - Antibodies neutralize pathogens

12
Impact of Memory
13
Artificial Immune Systems
  • Distributed systems for information processes.
  • Origin
  • study of immune systems
  • bio-algorithms
  • genetic algorithms
  • neural networks

14
Language development
  • Different perspectives on language.
  • Universal grammar/language
  • Genetic transmission
  • Localized hard-wired neurological structures
    crickets and songbirds
  • Higher animals learn language gradually training
    parameters of neural network

15
Complex adaptive system approach
  • Language
  • result of local interactions of language users
  • self-organizing process
  • agents benefit from being understood (fitness)
  • clustering of agent with same language/dialect

16
Methodology
  • Games
  • game theory for institutions, repeated games with
    prisoners dilemma
  • language games, imitation games
  • evolution of grammar fitness related to mutual
    understanding

17
Vowels
18
Emergence of vowels by adaptive imitation games
(De Boer, 2000)
19
Methodology (II)
  • Networks
  • Neural networks learning by finding the right
    connection strengths
  • Immune networks maintaining immune memory,
    spreading information over other parts of the
    network.
  • Social networks.

20
Methodology (III)
  • Evolutionary Computation
  • Genetic and evolutionary algorithms
  • fitness
  • selection
  • mutation
  • (cross-over)

21
Modeling self-organization of institutions
  • Coding rules
  • Creating rules
  • Selecting rules
  • Remembering rules

22
Coding rules
  • Grammar of Institutions (Crawford and Ostrom,
    1995)
  • Rules are build up from 5 components
  • Attributes (characteristics of the agents)
  • Deontic may/must/must not
  • Aim action of the agent
  • Conditions when, where and how
  • Or else sanctions when not following a rule

23
Creation of Rules
  • Mutations and cross-over
  • Immune systems constant generation of new
    lymphocytes
  • Language interaction with other groups and with
    new experiences
  • Computer led to new words (e-mail internet) and
    new meanings (windows mouse)
  • Social groups jargon of scientists

24
Genetic Libraries
25
Selection of Rules
Rules Constitutional Collective
Operational
Levels of analysis
Constitutional Collective Operational choice cho
ice choice
Processes Formulation Policy-making Appropriatio
n Governance Management Provision Adjudicatio
n Adjudication Monitoring Modification Enfor
cement
26
Selection of rules (II)
  • Criteria for success
  • Social networks
  • Mutual trust relationships
  • Recognition of trustworthy others (reputation,
    symbols, indirect reciprocity)

27
Remembering Rules
  • Law, universities, taboos, rituals, religions
  • Reinforcement and disturbances
  • Resilience
  • Redundancy

28

29

Coverage of antigen space by antibodies
30
Fitness versus redundancy
(Hightower et al, 1995)
31
Fitness related to redundancy
(Hightower et al, 1995)
32
Training the system
  • Allow small disturbances to maintain training of
    the strength of the network, the diversity and
    functional redundancy

33
Discussion
  • Empirical evidence for self-organization of
    institutions.
  • Formal models may help to explain observations.
  • But how to formally model how rules emerge, get
    selected and be remembered?

34
Discussion (II)
  • We may learn from similarities and differences
    between institutions, immune systems, and
    language development.
  • Computational tools exists to simulate immune
    systems and language development
  • Toward computational laboratories for
    social-ecological systems.
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