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Natalie Fridman and Gal A. Kaminka.
Comparing Human and Synthetic Group Behaviors: A Model Based on Social Psychology. In International Conference
on Cognitive Modeling (ICCM-09), 2009.
A previous version of this paper appeared in the proceedings of the Multi-Agent
Based Simulation (MABS) workshop at AAMAS-2009.
Existing models of group behavior, in a variety of fields, leavemany open challenges. In particular, existing models often focusonly on a specific phenomenon (e.g. flocking, pedestrianmovement), and thus must be switched depending on the goals of thesimulation. In contrast, we investigate a general cognitive modelof simulating group behaviors, based on Festinger's SocialComparison Theory (SCT), a prominent social psychology theory. Inprevious work, we have shown SCT covers a variety of pedestrianmovement phenomena. In this paper we present evidence for SCT'sgenerality by describing the use of the SCT model (using the Soarcognitive architecture) in generation of imitational behavior inloosely-coupled groups. Since the imitational behavior does nothave clear standards of evaluation, we propose a method for such evaluation. Based onexperiments with human subjects, we show that SCT generates behaviormore in-tune with human crowd behavior.
@InProceedings{iccm09sct-group, author = {Natalie Fridman and Gal A. Kaminka}, title = {Comparing Human and Synthetic Group Behaviors: A Model Based on Social Psychology}, OPTcrossref = {}, OPTkey = {}, booktitle = {International Conference on Cognitive Modeling ({ICCM}-09)}, OPTvolume = {}, OPTpages = {}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Existing models of group behavior, in a variety of fields, leave many open challenges. In particular, existing models often focus only on a specific phenomenon (e.g. flocking, pedestrian movement), and thus must be switched depending on the goals of the simulation. In contrast, we investigate a general cognitive model of simulating group behaviors, based on Festinger's Social Comparison Theory (SCT), a prominent social psychology theory. In previous work, we have shown SCT covers a variety of pedestrian movement phenomena. In this paper we present evidence for SCT's generality by describing the use of the SCT model (using the Soar cognitive architecture) in generation of imitational behavior in loosely-coupled groups. Since the imitational behavior does not have clear standards of evaluation, we propose a method for such evaluation. Based on experiments with human subjects, we show that SCT generates behavior more in-tune with human crowd behavior.}, wwwnote = {A previous version of this paper appeared in the proceedings of the Multi-Agent Based Simulation (MABS) workshop at AAMAS-2009.}, OPTeditor = {}, OPTvolume = {}, OPTnumber = {}, OPTseries = {}, OPTaddress = {}, OPTmonth = {}, OPTorganization = {}, OPTpublisher = {}, OPTacceptance = {}, OPTannote = {} }
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