Special track: Sense & Sensibility (Social Simulation Conference 2024)

Call for contributions

Dear colleagues,

If you are working with making more realistic models of human deliberation, please consider submitting your work (long paper, short paper, extended abstract, poster) to the special track “Sense & Sensibility: Modelling human deliberation and decision-making” at the Social Simulation Conference (16-20 September 2024,Cracow, Poland).

Submission link: https://ssc2024.uek.krakow.pl/call-for-submissions/

Deadline: 08th of May 2024

For details of the call, see below the signature.

This special track is supported by the ESSA SIG MOOD (Models of Human Decision).

Looking forward to receiving your contributions,
Loïs, Melania, Friederike, and Vivek.Special track @ SSC2024: Sense & Sensibility: Modelling human deliberation 

and decision-making

Track chairs: 

Loïs Vanhée, Umeå University, Sweden

Melania Borit, UiT the Arctic University of Norway, Norway

Friederike Wall, University of Klagenfurt, Austria

Vivek Nallur, University College Dublin, Ireland

Replicating human-like decisions is at the core of agent-based social simulation. As such, we need data, theories, models, and methods for the design and validation of agents that reproduce authentic and realistic features of human deliberation (e.g. most deprived needs tend to yield to the greater corrective action) while also accounting for the constraints and aims of social simulations (e.g. covering specific social phenomena, scalability to many agents).

The current prevailing approach to model human decision-making in social simulation revolves around the random selection of behaviors from data-driven probability distributions. While this approach has its benefits, it can be blind to psychological dynamics that may be key to the accuracy of the conclusions of the model (e.g. coherence of decisions over time) [1,2,3]. If we want to expand the range of phenomena social simulation can cover and the quality of our simulations and conclusions derived from them, we need our models to be further anchored in the findings identified by psychology and cognitive sciences. However, the questions of how to produce such models and how to balance the specific considerations they entail (e.g. time, collaborative effort, complexity, validation, social implications) with simulation benefits (e.g. realism, explainability) remain open and are the subject of this special track.

This track is open to all contributions dedicated to the study of agents featuring human-like realistic deliberation within social simulation, which include, but are not limited to:

The track welcomes any scientific methodology.

[1] Castelfranchi, C. (2001) The theory of social functions: challenges for computational social science and multi-agent learning. Cognitive Systems Research, 2(1), 5-38.

[2] Edmonds, B. (2012) Context in social simulation: why it can’t be wished away. Computational and Mathematical Organization Theory 18(1), 5-21.

[3] Jensen, M., Lorig, F., Vanhée, L., & Dignum, F. (2021) Deployment and Effects of an App for Tracking and Tracing Contacts During the COVID-19 Crisis. In Social Simulation for a Crisis (pp. 167-188). Springer, Cham.