0000000001046150

AUTHOR

Christopher J. Lynch

0000-0002-4830-7488

showing 2 related works from this author

Modelling terror management theory: computer simulations of the impact of mortality salience on religiosity

2017

ABSTRACTThis article outlines the development – and reports on the experimental findings – of two computational models designed to simulate the dynamic systems and behavioural patterns identified and clarified by research on terror management theory. The causal architectures of these models are informed by empirical research on the effects of mortality salience on “religiosity” (and vice versa). They are also informed by research on the way in which perception of personal and environmental hazards activate evolved cognitive and coalitional precautionary systems that can intensify anxiety-alleviating behaviours such as imaginative engagement with supernatural agents postulated within a relig…

Agent-based modelComputational modelmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyTerror management theoryCognition050105 experimental psychologyReligiosityEmpirical researchPerceptionMortality salience0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologySocial psychologymedia_commonCognitive psychologyReligion, Brain & Behavior
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A Generative Model of the Mutual Escalation of Anxiety Between Religious Groups

2018

We propose a generative agent-based model of the emergence and escalation of xenophobic anxiety in which individuals from two different religious groups encounter various hazards within an artificial society. The architecture of the model is informed by several empirically validated theories about the role of religion in intergroup conflict. Our results identify some of the conditions and mechanisms that engender the intensification of anxiety within and between religious groups. We define mutually escalating xenophobic anxiety as the increase of the average level of anxiety of the agents in both groups over time. Trace validation techniques show that the most common conditions under which …

Agent-based model060303 religions & theologyRadicalizationReligious violenceArtificial societymedia_common.quotation_subjectGroup conflictGeneral Social Sciences06 humanities and the arts0603 philosophy ethics and religion01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmasXenophobia0103 physical sciencesComputer Science (miscellaneous)medicineAnxietymedicine.symptomPsychologySocial identity theorySocial psychologymedia_commonJournal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation
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