So ... I've been programming a lot in NetLogo and so forth, and I've thought
about the inherent differences between 2D models and 3D models (or even
higher dimensions).  But I haven't thought about it very deeply, and I
haven't formally investigated how the properties of, say, clusters of
self-organizing agents behave in a 2D environment vs. a 3D environment.

So the other day someone asked me: what are the issues, what are the
differences?  Fundamental or superficial?

Offhand, I sort of assumed the relationship between different simulation
spaces would be pretty much the same in both 2D and 3D.  Sure, I assumed
there would be a scaling issue, but not much else.  (e.g., a 2D pred-prey
model would show different numbers than a 3D pred-prey model, but the
dynamics would be essentially the same.)

Is this true?  Anyone ever investigate this question?  Know of some good
papers out there?  Other resources?  I'm not assuming an infinite space, if
that makes a difference ... in a 2D environment I assume a torus, and
imagine if I programed a 3D simulation I would use similar assumptions.

Any guidance would be greatly appreciated!  I have a presentation on Friday,
and I would like to be able to cover this issue.

Thanks!

-Ted
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