Becoming an Agent-Based Modeller
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Product details
- ISBN 9781032615585
- Weight: 510g
- Dimensions: 215 x 279mm
- Publication Date: 30 Apr 2026
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
Becoming an Agent-based Modeller takes you on a journey, from curiosity about social phenomena to generating them with a computer simulation. The book introduces agent-based modelling as a method to understand societies as complex systems, systems of interconnected, interdependent, and interacting agents.
The book is structured like a course rather than a textbook or reference book. The core of the book is an extended tutorial introducing the NetLogo programming language. Using the example of an epidemic, it explores how an agent-based model of social influence, situational awareness, and contextual decisions by individual agents about protective behaviour can help us understand plausible epidemic trajectories. The tutorial demonstrates how to build an agent-based model from scratch and use it in research, including the conceptualisation stage, the operationalisation and implementation, experimentation, and interpretation. This practical part of the book is embedded in chapters on theory, epistemology, and ethics of agent-based modelling.
With pedagogical tools including key discussion points, illustrations, and highlighted concepts, this is an ideal resource for courses on ABM, and for postgraduate students and researchers in the social sciences and beyond, who wish to develop their understanding of agent-based modelling.
Jennifer Badham is Assistant Professor in Social Data Science in the Department of Sociology at Durham University, UK. She is a computational social scientist, interested particularly in how social structure shapes the transmission of ideas, disease, or behaviour.
Corinna Elsenbroich is Reader in Computational Modelling at the School of Health and Wellbeing at the University of Glasgow, UK. She is a sociologist with a background in philosophy of science, sociology, and complexity social science methods.
