0000000000073565

AUTHOR

Kevin Mccaffree

showing 4 related works from this author

InCREDulity in Artificial Societies

2021

This paper describes an artificial society in which the simulated agents behave and interact based on a computational architecture informed by insights from one of the leading social psychological theories in the scientific study of secularization and religion: “credibility-enhancing displays” (or CREDs) theory. After introducing the key elements of the theory and outlining the computational architecture of our CRED model, we present some of our initial simulation results. These efforts are intended to advance the quest within social simulation for more authentic artificial societies and more plausible human-like agents with complex interactive and interpretative capacities.

Agent-based modelCognitive scienceComputational architectureComputer scienceArtificial societySecularizationKey (cryptography)Scientific studySocial simulation
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Best Friends Forever? Modeling the Mechanisms of Friendship Network Formation

2020

The formation of friendships and alliances is a ubiquitous feature of human life, and likely a crucial component of the cooperative hunting and child-rearing practices that helped our early hominin ancestors survive. Research on contemporary human beings typically finds that strong-tie social networks are fairly small, and reveals a high degree of physical (e.g., age) and social-structural (e.g., educational attainment) homophily. Yet, existing work all too often underestimates, or even ignores, the importance of abstract, symbolic homophily (such as shared identities or worldviews) as a driver of friendship formation. Here we employ agent-based modeling to identify the optimal variable wei…

media_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050109 social psychology050105 experimental psychologyHomophilyEducational attainmentVariable (computer science)FriendshipOrder (exchange)KinshipOutgroup0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesCooperative huntingPsychologySocial psychologymedia_common2020 Winter Simulation Conference (WSC)
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Religious Exiting and Social Networks: Computer Simulations of Religious/Secular Pluralism

2021

Statistical models attempting to predict who will disaffiliate from religions have typically accounted for less than 15% of the variation in religious affiliations, suggesting that we have only a partial understanding of this vital social process. Using agent-based simulations in three “artificial societies” (one predominantly religious; one predominantly secular; and one in between), we demonstrate that worldview pluralism within one’s neighborhood and family social networks can be a significant predictor of religious (dis)affiliation but in pluralistic societies worldview diversity is less important and, instead, people move toward worldview neutrality. Our results suggest that there may …

HistoryReligions. Mythology. RationalismSociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectReligious studiesBL1-2790Gender StudiesPhilosophySocial supportEarly adopterVariation (linguistics)Pluralism (political theory)AnthropologyVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200NeutralitySociologySociology Computer ScienceSocial psychologyDiversity (politics)media_commonSecularism and Nonreligion
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The Moral Foundations of Left-Wing Authoritarianism: On the Character, Cohesion, and Clout of Tribal Equalitarian Discourse

2021

Left-wing authoritarianism remains far less understood than right-wing authoritarianism. We contribute to the literature on the former, which typically relies on surveys, using a new social media analytics approach. We use a list of 60 terms to provide an exploratory sketch of the outlines of a political ideology (tribal equalitarianism) with origins in 19th and 20th century social philosophy. We then use analyses of the English Corpus of Google Books (over 8 million books) and scraped unique tweets from Twitter (n = 202,852) to conduct a series of investigations to discern the extent to which this ideology is cohesive amongst the public, reveals signatures of authoritarianism and has been …

Social and Information Networks (cs.SI)FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Computers and SocietyComputer Science - Computation and LanguageComputers and Society (cs.CY)Computer Science - Social and Information NetworksComputation and Language (cs.CL)
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