Synopses & Reviews
When applied to problems in poorly structured domains such as government decision making, conventional methods for simulating - for example, a controversial problem like acid rain - prove to be flawed. In Eco-Logic, the authors describe an alternative approach, one that views simulation models as logical statements. Using the techniques of logic programming, they provide a standard notation for the construction of ecological simulation programs that can be readily understood by those who lack modeling, mathematical, or programming skills.
The authors demonstrate this approach in the domain of ecological modeling by building a series of computer programs to assist ecologists to build simulation models. They show how the description of an ecological situation can be represented and then incrementally refined into a simulation model. This enables ecologists to describe problems initially in ecological terms, rather than in mathematical or programming terms. It also enables the final model to be formally related to the original ecological description. This permits a computer program to give ecologically meaningful explanations of the results of the model, and facilitates rapid remodeling if the underlying assumptions of the model are modified.
Synopsis
In Eco-Logic, the authors describe an alternative approach, one that views simulation models as logical statements.
Synopsis
When applied to problems in poorly structured domains such as government decision making, conventional methods for simulating - for example, a controversial problem like acid rain - prove to be flawed. In
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [217]-219) and index.
About the Author
David Robertson is Professor and Director of the Centre For Intelligent Systems and Their Applications, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh.Alan Bundy is a professor in the School of Informatics at the University of Edinburgh.Robert Muetzelfeldt is a Lecturer in the Institute of Ecology and Resource Management at the University of Edinburgh.Mandy Haggith is a Lecturer at Griffith University in Australia.Mike Uschold is a research scientist at the Artificial Intelligence Applications Institute in Edinburgh.