Our research teams have produced four chapters about various computational models in the new Springer volume Advances in Social Simulation.
The first, led by Piotr Laskowski, is titled “A cognitive model of epistemic vigilance in situations of varying competence, consistency, and utility.”
The second, led by Ivan Puga Gonzalez, is titled “An agent-based model of prosocial equilibrium: The role of religiously motivated behavior in the formation and maintenance of large-scale societies.”
The third, led by Mariusz Rybnik, is titled “An agent-based model of the role of epistemic vigilance in human cooperation.”
The fourth, led by Patrycja Antosz, is titled “HUM-e: An emotive-socio-cognitive agent architecture for representing human decision-making in anxiogenic contexts.”
Well done, everyone!