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Simulating Human Behaviour for
  Understanding and Managing
  Environmental Resource Use
       Jager &Mosler (2007)



      Presentation 19-12-2011:
   Martin Specken & Nikki Demandt
Authors

• Wander Jager
     – University of Groningen
     – Expertise:
           • Marketing
           • Agent basedsimulation
• Hans Joachim Mosler
     – University of Zurich
     – Expertise:
           • Modelingsocialsystems
           • Agent basedsimulation

SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Abstract

• Demonstrate how simulations can be used to:

     – Identify interaction between human behaviour and
       complex environmental systems

     – Explore possible effects of policy strategies

     – Contribute to our understanding

     – Manage environmental resources in sustainable way

SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Observingeffects of humanbehaviour
onnatural resources

                   Plato discussed the erosion
                   of Atticadue to agriculture
360 B.C.                                                                                           2011



             0                                                                                1968

           Hardin’s paper “Tragedy of the commons”
           led to experimentaltraditionwhich led
           to anabundance of laboratory studies

Visualisation: www.oplossingsgerichtmanagement.nl and www.themotivatedyouth.com
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Agent-based simulation allows for…

• …experimenting with complexities at


                                             Individual level




Visualisation: Martin Specken, Nikki Demandt
Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Agent-based simulation allows for… (2)

• …experimenting with complexities at

                                                Social level
                                             Individual level




Visualisation: Martin Specken, Nikki Demandt
Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Agent-based simulation allows for… (3)

• …experimenting with complexities at
                                          Environmental level
                                                Social level
                                             Individual level




         …by formalizing agents in an artificial world
Visualisation: Martin Specken, Nikki Demandt
Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Agent-basedsimulationallowsfor… (4)

• …the modeling of
  interactionsbetweenindividuals




Visualisation: Screendump of Netlogo model byWander Jager
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Agent-basedsimulationallowsfor… (5)

• …experimentingwith
  policymeasures
  without harming
  people and the
  environment




Visualisation: Milgram experiment (1963)
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Whatshouldbesimulated and how?

• Jager & Janssen (2003): Theorieson

     – Needs


     – Decision-makingprocesses


     – Processes of (social) learning


Visualisation: Google images, www.biojournaal.nl
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Whatshouldbesimulated and how? (2)

• Formalization of needs is important:

     – Whensatisfaction of personal
       needsharms the environment

     – Thismay effect need
       satisfaction in the long run




Visualisation: www.atgrannyshouse.blogspot.com and www.sp.nl
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Whatshouldbesimulated and how? (3)

• Decisionprocessesrefer to:

     – Peoplemakingchoices
     – Storage of information
     – Formation of attitudes




Visualisation: www.amazon.com
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Whatshouldbesimulated and how? (4)

• Socialprocessesplay important roles:
     – Diffusion of newbehaviour and practices
     – Networkeffects




Visualisation: www.blogs.com
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Whatshouldbesimulated and how? (5)

• Conclusion:

      “The essentialpoint is that the output - in
      terms of simulatedbehaviour - has
      oftennotbeen hypothesizedbeforehand”

• Even in simplesituations we are notcapableto
  predict the outcome



SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Simulating Behavioral Processes in
Environmental Management
• Jager & Mosler discuss 3 simulation studies
  that illustrate how agent-based simulation

     1. Contributes to explain well-known empirical
        phenomena

     2. Allows for replicating multiple experimental results
        by allowing for several factors to interact

     3. May be integrated with models of environmental
        systems

Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
HowUncertaintyStimulatesOver-Harvesting

• Jager et al (2002): Whatrole does
  socialcontagionplay in over-harvestingdue to
  the desireforshort-termoutcomes?

• Model:
     – Need for subsistence -> Fishing for food
     – Need for leisure -> Not-fishing
     – Satisfaction = Sum of both needs
     – Uncertainty [expected catch – actual catch]

SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
How Uncertainty Stimulates Over-Harvesting (2)

                  4                   Uncertainty
   strategies
                                 High                       Low
                                                                                   Automated

                  High        imitate                     repeat                    no memory
   Satisfaction




                                                                                  update of other
                                                                                      agents


                                                                                    Reasoned
                                                        social
                  Low deliberate
                                                       compare                   memory update
                                                                                 of other agents


Visualisation: Martin Specken and Nikki Demandt
Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
HowUncertaintyStimulatesOver-Harvesting (3)

• Results:
    – An “optimism effect” was found
         1.   Fish stock is high (High satisfaction, low uncertainty)
         2.   Repeat own behaviour
         3.   Agents only consider short-term outcomes
         4.   Lower fish stock not observed
         5.   Continuous fishing
         6.   Fish stock low (Low satisfaction, high uncertainty)
         7.   Deliberation: Too late to restore fish stock
    – An “adaptation effect” was found
         • More agents -> Less resource protecting behaviour
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
HowUncertaintyStimulatesOver-Harvesting (4)

• Implications:

     – Good environmental news may lead to “bad habits”

     – Simulation can lead to policy measures +
       promotional strategies of “proper behaviour”

     – Empirical follow-up studies can be focussed of
       identifying effects in the field



SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
A Simulation of DecisionMakingfor the
SustainableUse of Environmental Resources

• Mosler&Brucks (2003): How people use
  environmental resources will be influenced by:
     – Their own goals
     – Size of the resource
     – Assessment of the way other people use it

• Model: Simulation of resource use

• Tried to replicate findings of lab experiments
  with real participants
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
A Simulation of DecisionMakingfor the
SustainableUse of Environmental Resources (2)

• Model: Social-ecological relevance
     – Individual in environmental resources dilemma
       simultaneous weights social and ecological factors
     – Social:
           • Attributions
           • Social values
           • Others’ behaviour                                                   Individual
                                                                                 Consumption
     – Ecological:
           • State of the resource
           • Resource uncertainty

SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
A Simulation of DecisionMakingfor the
SustainableUse of Environmental Resources (3)

• Implications:

     – Specific interactions of variables so far examined
       separately can be demonstrated

     – Parts of complicated process of decision making can
       be captured

     – Policy measures can be more adequate and will be
       more effective in changing resource use
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Transitions in a Virtual Society

• Jager et al (2000): Will more realistic agents
  result in different human-environment
  interaction compared to standard economically
  optimizing agents?

• Model: Lakeland
     – Fish stock in a lake
     – Gold mine (pollution)
     – Economical submodel
           • Sell fish and/or gold
           • Buy food and/or status-enhancing products

SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Transitions in a Virtual Society (2)

• 16 agents with 4 needs
     – Subsistence (Satisfied by fish or gold)
     – Identity (Relative amount of money)
     – Leisure (Share of time spent on leisure)
     – Freedom (Total amount of money owned)
• 4 decision strategies
     – Homo psychologicus
           • 4 strategies
     – Homo economicus
           • deliberate strategy
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Exploring the Effects of
EnvironmentalPolicyStrategiesforSustainable
Management of Environmental Resources

• Jager&Mosler discuss 3 simulation studies
  that examined the effects of policy measures

     1. Allows for linking of emperical context and
        simulations

     2. May contribute to applicability of simulation
        results in practical policy settings


SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
DeterminingPolicyEffectiveness of a
Car-SpeedingCampaign
• The model (Mosler et al, 2001)


                                    1          Resistance to
                                               Change Attitude
                                                                                    Attitude
         Self-Responsability
                                                                          3         Behavior

         PersonalValues

                                               Resistance to
                                               changeBehavior
                                    2

Visualisation: Mosler et al (2001), colorseditedby Martin Specken and Nikki Demandt
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
DeterminingPolicyEffectiveness of a
Car-SpeedingCampaign (2)
• Realworldcampaign “Slow Down”

     – Switzerland (Münsingen)
     – Cognitive dissonance theory (Festinger, 1957)
     – Self-commitment instrument:
           1. Drivers committed themselves in writing
           2. Prompts
           3. Feedback


     – Questionnaire surveyconductedbefore and after

SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Determining Policy Effectiveness of a
Car-Speeding Campaign (3)
• Results
     - Differences between measured and simulated end values

                  Differenc
       Half                            0 – 10         11 – 20             21 -          Missing
                      e
                   Attitude          50% (30) 37% (22) 13% (8)                               7
        1          Behavior 45% (30) 20% (13) 35% (23)                                       1

                   Attitude          69% (34) 15% (7)                  16% (8)              18
        2          Behavior 29% (19) 32% (21) 39% (26)                                       1

Visualisation: Mosler et al (2001), edited by Martin Specken and Nikki Demandt
Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Determining Policy Effectiveness of a
Car-Speeding Campaign (4)
• Conclusions

     1. Possible to replicate outcomes of dissonance
        reduction processes

     2. Improves understanding of intra-individual
        processes

     3. Determine most successful parameters for a
        campaign

SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Environmental Technologies forHouseholds:
SharedSolar Power Plants
• The model (Mosler et al, 2002)
                  Ecological
                   factors
                  - resource size
                                                                    Ecologicalinfluence
                     - resource     Ecologicalrelevance
                    uncertainty



                                              Social-       Weighting
                                                                                 Use
                                            ecological
                                                                               change
                                            relevance


                     Social           Socialrelevance
                    factors                                         Socialinfluence
                  -use of others
                  - socialvalues



Visualisation: Mosler et al (2002), editedby Martin Specken and Nikki Demandt
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Environmental Technologies forHouseholds:
SharedSolar Power Plants (2)
• Santa Maria de Loreto (Cuba)




Visualisation: www.solar-e.com
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Environmental Technologies forHouseholds:
SharedSolar Power Plants (3)
• Results

     – Simulating a power shortage. Known components:
          1.     State of batteries
          2.     Consumption of neighbors

     – A Run of 144 hours with 50 household agents was
       executed
           • No rules were enforced


     – Same or better consumption when no rules were
       enforced

SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Environmental Technologies for Households:
Shared Solar Power Plants (4)
• Conclusions

     – Simulations can help
       advice politicians in
       design and build
       sustainable
       environmental
       –technical systems



Visualisation: www.theepochtimes.com
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Diffusion of Green Products
• Model (Jager et al, 2002)
     – Consumers and firms were simulated as populations
       with different behavioral characteristics

     – Need satisfaction depended on:
           1. Social need: same preferences as neighbors
           2. Personal need: personal preference or taste

     – Four decision strategies

     – Two conditions
           • Homo psychologicus
           • Homo economicus



SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Diffusion of Green Products (2)

• Model
      – Stable market (5 green and 5 non green)
      – Continuous product-development market
      – Taxing:
           •     Full tax at t = 50 (fast)
           •     Gradual tax increase from t = 25 to t = 75 (slow)




Visualisation: www.eenvandaag.nl and www.sp.nl
SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Diffusion of Green Products (3)
• Results

     – Tax regime makes largest difference in stable market
           • If tax increase slow -> a slow increase of green products
           • If tax increase fast -> a fast increase of green products

     – Behavioral characteristics makes largest difference in
       continuous product development market
           • Homo economicus:
                 – Slower response to change in tax
                 – Personal needs was sooner satisfied due to product
                   development
           • Homo psychologicus:
                 – agents developed habitual behavior

SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Diffusion of Green Products (4)

• Conclusions

     – Assumptions on decision making and related market
       dynamics are critical in understanding effect of
       policy measures

     – Experiment provided a perspective on how policy
       measures can be tested in a multi-agent simulation




SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Implicationsfor Research and PolicyMaking of
EnvironmentalProblems
• Simulation offer richmethodology

• Significant contribution to studybehavior-
  environmentalinteractions

• Valuabletoolforexploringeffectiveness of
  policymeasuresin complex environments

       Behavioraltheory +                                                     Agent-based
      empirical case studies                                                  simulations

SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
Suggestions

• Addvisualisations, e.g.
     – Data tables
     – Screenshots
     – Flowcharts
     – Graphs

         Thishelpsmaking the goal of the article more clear




SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
M1

             M2
Questions    M3
    +
discussion
             M4

             M5

             M6

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Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use

  • 1. Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use Jager &Mosler (2007) Presentation 19-12-2011: Martin Specken & Nikki Demandt
  • 2. Authors • Wander Jager – University of Groningen – Expertise: • Marketing • Agent basedsimulation • Hans Joachim Mosler – University of Zurich – Expertise: • Modelingsocialsystems • Agent basedsimulation SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 3. Abstract • Demonstrate how simulations can be used to: – Identify interaction between human behaviour and complex environmental systems – Explore possible effects of policy strategies – Contribute to our understanding – Manage environmental resources in sustainable way SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 4. Observingeffects of humanbehaviour onnatural resources Plato discussed the erosion of Atticadue to agriculture 360 B.C. 2011 0 1968 Hardin’s paper “Tragedy of the commons” led to experimentaltraditionwhich led to anabundance of laboratory studies Visualisation: www.oplossingsgerichtmanagement.nl and www.themotivatedyouth.com SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 5. Agent-based simulation allows for… • …experimenting with complexities at Individual level Visualisation: Martin Specken, Nikki Demandt Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 6. Agent-based simulation allows for… (2) • …experimenting with complexities at Social level Individual level Visualisation: Martin Specken, Nikki Demandt Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 7. Agent-based simulation allows for… (3) • …experimenting with complexities at Environmental level Social level Individual level …by formalizing agents in an artificial world Visualisation: Martin Specken, Nikki Demandt Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 8. Agent-basedsimulationallowsfor… (4) • …the modeling of interactionsbetweenindividuals Visualisation: Screendump of Netlogo model byWander Jager SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 9. Agent-basedsimulationallowsfor… (5) • …experimentingwith policymeasures without harming people and the environment Visualisation: Milgram experiment (1963) SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 10. Whatshouldbesimulated and how? • Jager & Janssen (2003): Theorieson – Needs – Decision-makingprocesses – Processes of (social) learning Visualisation: Google images, www.biojournaal.nl SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 11. Whatshouldbesimulated and how? (2) • Formalization of needs is important: – Whensatisfaction of personal needsharms the environment – Thismay effect need satisfaction in the long run Visualisation: www.atgrannyshouse.blogspot.com and www.sp.nl SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 12. Whatshouldbesimulated and how? (3) • Decisionprocessesrefer to: – Peoplemakingchoices – Storage of information – Formation of attitudes Visualisation: www.amazon.com SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 13. Whatshouldbesimulated and how? (4) • Socialprocessesplay important roles: – Diffusion of newbehaviour and practices – Networkeffects Visualisation: www.blogs.com SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 14. Whatshouldbesimulated and how? (5) • Conclusion: “The essentialpoint is that the output - in terms of simulatedbehaviour - has oftennotbeen hypothesizedbeforehand” • Even in simplesituations we are notcapableto predict the outcome SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 15. Simulating Behavioral Processes in Environmental Management • Jager & Mosler discuss 3 simulation studies that illustrate how agent-based simulation 1. Contributes to explain well-known empirical phenomena 2. Allows for replicating multiple experimental results by allowing for several factors to interact 3. May be integrated with models of environmental systems Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 16. HowUncertaintyStimulatesOver-Harvesting • Jager et al (2002): Whatrole does socialcontagionplay in over-harvestingdue to the desireforshort-termoutcomes? • Model: – Need for subsistence -> Fishing for food – Need for leisure -> Not-fishing – Satisfaction = Sum of both needs – Uncertainty [expected catch – actual catch] SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 17. How Uncertainty Stimulates Over-Harvesting (2) 4 Uncertainty strategies High Low Automated High imitate repeat no memory Satisfaction update of other agents Reasoned social Low deliberate compare memory update of other agents Visualisation: Martin Specken and Nikki Demandt Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 18. HowUncertaintyStimulatesOver-Harvesting (3) • Results: – An “optimism effect” was found 1. Fish stock is high (High satisfaction, low uncertainty) 2. Repeat own behaviour 3. Agents only consider short-term outcomes 4. Lower fish stock not observed 5. Continuous fishing 6. Fish stock low (Low satisfaction, high uncertainty) 7. Deliberation: Too late to restore fish stock – An “adaptation effect” was found • More agents -> Less resource protecting behaviour SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 19. HowUncertaintyStimulatesOver-Harvesting (4) • Implications: – Good environmental news may lead to “bad habits” – Simulation can lead to policy measures + promotional strategies of “proper behaviour” – Empirical follow-up studies can be focussed of identifying effects in the field SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 20. A Simulation of DecisionMakingfor the SustainableUse of Environmental Resources • Mosler&Brucks (2003): How people use environmental resources will be influenced by: – Their own goals – Size of the resource – Assessment of the way other people use it • Model: Simulation of resource use • Tried to replicate findings of lab experiments with real participants SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 21. A Simulation of DecisionMakingfor the SustainableUse of Environmental Resources (2) • Model: Social-ecological relevance – Individual in environmental resources dilemma simultaneous weights social and ecological factors – Social: • Attributions • Social values • Others’ behaviour Individual Consumption – Ecological: • State of the resource • Resource uncertainty SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 22. A Simulation of DecisionMakingfor the SustainableUse of Environmental Resources (3) • Implications: – Specific interactions of variables so far examined separately can be demonstrated – Parts of complicated process of decision making can be captured – Policy measures can be more adequate and will be more effective in changing resource use SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 23. Transitions in a Virtual Society • Jager et al (2000): Will more realistic agents result in different human-environment interaction compared to standard economically optimizing agents? • Model: Lakeland – Fish stock in a lake – Gold mine (pollution) – Economical submodel • Sell fish and/or gold • Buy food and/or status-enhancing products SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 24. Transitions in a Virtual Society (2) • 16 agents with 4 needs – Subsistence (Satisfied by fish or gold) – Identity (Relative amount of money) – Leisure (Share of time spent on leisure) – Freedom (Total amount of money owned) • 4 decision strategies – Homo psychologicus • 4 strategies – Homo economicus • deliberate strategy SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 25. Exploring the Effects of EnvironmentalPolicyStrategiesforSustainable Management of Environmental Resources • Jager&Mosler discuss 3 simulation studies that examined the effects of policy measures 1. Allows for linking of emperical context and simulations 2. May contribute to applicability of simulation results in practical policy settings SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 26. DeterminingPolicyEffectiveness of a Car-SpeedingCampaign • The model (Mosler et al, 2001) 1 Resistance to Change Attitude Attitude Self-Responsability 3 Behavior PersonalValues Resistance to changeBehavior 2 Visualisation: Mosler et al (2001), colorseditedby Martin Specken and Nikki Demandt SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 27. DeterminingPolicyEffectiveness of a Car-SpeedingCampaign (2) • Realworldcampaign “Slow Down” – Switzerland (Münsingen) – Cognitive dissonance theory (Festinger, 1957) – Self-commitment instrument: 1. Drivers committed themselves in writing 2. Prompts 3. Feedback – Questionnaire surveyconductedbefore and after SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 28. Determining Policy Effectiveness of a Car-Speeding Campaign (3) • Results - Differences between measured and simulated end values Differenc Half 0 – 10 11 – 20 21 - Missing e Attitude 50% (30) 37% (22) 13% (8) 7 1 Behavior 45% (30) 20% (13) 35% (23) 1 Attitude 69% (34) 15% (7) 16% (8) 18 2 Behavior 29% (19) 32% (21) 39% (26) 1 Visualisation: Mosler et al (2001), edited by Martin Specken and Nikki Demandt Simulating Human Behaviour for Understanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use (Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 29. Determining Policy Effectiveness of a Car-Speeding Campaign (4) • Conclusions 1. Possible to replicate outcomes of dissonance reduction processes 2. Improves understanding of intra-individual processes 3. Determine most successful parameters for a campaign SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 30. Environmental Technologies forHouseholds: SharedSolar Power Plants • The model (Mosler et al, 2002) Ecological factors - resource size Ecologicalinfluence - resource Ecologicalrelevance uncertainty Social- Weighting Use ecological change relevance Social Socialrelevance factors Socialinfluence -use of others - socialvalues Visualisation: Mosler et al (2002), editedby Martin Specken and Nikki Demandt SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 31. Environmental Technologies forHouseholds: SharedSolar Power Plants (2) • Santa Maria de Loreto (Cuba) Visualisation: www.solar-e.com SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 32. Environmental Technologies forHouseholds: SharedSolar Power Plants (3) • Results – Simulating a power shortage. Known components: 1. State of batteries 2. Consumption of neighbors – A Run of 144 hours with 50 household agents was executed • No rules were enforced – Same or better consumption when no rules were enforced SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 33. Environmental Technologies for Households: Shared Solar Power Plants (4) • Conclusions – Simulations can help advice politicians in design and build sustainable environmental –technical systems Visualisation: www.theepochtimes.com SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 34. Diffusion of Green Products • Model (Jager et al, 2002) – Consumers and firms were simulated as populations with different behavioral characteristics – Need satisfaction depended on: 1. Social need: same preferences as neighbors 2. Personal need: personal preference or taste – Four decision strategies – Two conditions • Homo psychologicus • Homo economicus SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 35. Diffusion of Green Products (2) • Model – Stable market (5 green and 5 non green) – Continuous product-development market – Taxing: • Full tax at t = 50 (fast) • Gradual tax increase from t = 25 to t = 75 (slow) Visualisation: www.eenvandaag.nl and www.sp.nl SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 36. Diffusion of Green Products (3) • Results – Tax regime makes largest difference in stable market • If tax increase slow -> a slow increase of green products • If tax increase fast -> a fast increase of green products – Behavioral characteristics makes largest difference in continuous product development market • Homo economicus: – Slower response to change in tax – Personal needs was sooner satisfied due to product development • Homo psychologicus: – agents developed habitual behavior SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 37. Diffusion of Green Products (4) • Conclusions – Assumptions on decision making and related market dynamics are critical in understanding effect of policy measures – Experiment provided a perspective on how policy measures can be tested in a multi-agent simulation SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 38. Implicationsfor Research and PolicyMaking of EnvironmentalProblems • Simulation offer richmethodology • Significant contribution to studybehavior- environmentalinteractions • Valuabletoolforexploringeffectiveness of policymeasuresin complex environments Behavioraltheory + Agent-based empirical case studies simulations SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 39. Suggestions • Addvisualisations, e.g. – Data tables – Screenshots – Flowcharts – Graphs Thishelpsmaking the goal of the article more clear SimulatingHumanBehaviourforUnderstanding and Managing Environmental Resource Use(Jager, Mosler, 2007)
  • 40. M1 M2 Questions M3 + discussion M4 M5 M6