Mechanistic Models in Computational Social Science
Physics and Society
2021-10-01 v3 Social and Information Networks
Abstract
Quantitative social science is not only about regression analysis or, in general, data inference. Computer simulations of social mechanisms have a 60-year long history. They have been used for many different purposes -- to test scenarios, test the consistency of descriptive theories (proof-of-concept models), explore emergent phenomena, forecast, etc. In this essay, we sketch these historical developments, the role of mechanistic models in the social sciences, and the influences from the natural and formal sciences. We argue that mechanistic computational models form a common ground for social and natural sciences and look forward to possible future information flow across the social-natural divide.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1507.00477,
title = {Mechanistic Models in Computational Social Science},
author = {Petter Holme and Fredrik Liljeros},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1507.00477},
year = {2021}
}
Comments
v3, many typos corrected