Well, ok.

  1. I have no idea what an "active management point of view" means.
  2. An epidemic is not an agent.  The epidemic is the emergent behavior
  of the system in response to a pathogen being introduced into the population
  of agents (people, it this case) in the system being simulated.
  3. I have no idea what "exploiting the passive resource of infection
  pathways" means.

Phil, I strongly recommend that before you invest much more time asking
questions about agent based models and their use that you actually build one
yourself.  And then run it.  Until then, I suspect your ability understand
the basic underlying principles of ABM technology will be somewhat limited.

--
Doug Roberts, RTI International
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
505-455-7333 - Office
505-670-8195 - Cell

On 4/2/07, Phil Henshaw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


Not sure what happened to my last post to try to clarify the question, but
another thought occurred to me this AM

Maybe a way to look at an epidemic from the active management point of
view,
and an epidemic as an autonomous agent itself, is to consider it as
exploiting the passive resource of infection pathways in a community.
Any
particular epidemic may be using the familiar ones, or some unfamiliar
ones.
  It may discover new ones in the course of events.   The question is how
to
use models to help people a) identify the interruptible links in the
pathways an epidemic is exploiting?, and b) how to tell when the epidemic
has changed to exploit some new unseen pathway that a new intervention
strategy will be needed for?


--
Phil Henshaw             ¸¸¸¸.·´ ¯ `·.¸¸¸¸
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
680 Ft. Washington Ave
NY NY 10040
tel: 212-795-4844
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
explorations: www.synapse9.com
Re: [FRIAM] One of my projects
Douglas Roberts
Sat, 31 Mar 2007 09:05:26 -0800

Phil,

I did read your question, repeated below:

Cool, do you include any comparative natural system component?  Perhaps
working with better ways to identify system structures in natural systems
and early signs of when they are inventing new ones would be helpful in
developing tests for models that approximate the complexity of nature.


However, I found it to be sufficiently ambiguous that I had absolutely no
idea what was being asked, and thus found myself at a complete loss for a
response.

--
Doug Roberts, RTI International
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
505-455-7333 - Office
505-670-8195 - Cell



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