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Life

Interview: Can we model the real world?

By Liz Else

9 May 2007

If there’s one thing that social scientists, economists and policy-makers would give their eye teeth for, it’s finding out how large-scale social patterns arise. Behavioural economist Joshua Epstein thinks he’s getting closer to understanding such dynamics by building rich models that represent how people act, and how their interactions translate into wide-scale change. As he tells Liz Else, he’s applying this approach to myriad problems, from how to minimise deaths in a flu pandemic, to uncovering the fate of lost cultures – and even to “growing” the Ten Commandments from scratch.

How does your work differ from what other modellers have…

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