Author: Murphy, Kilian J.; Ciuti, Simone; Kane, Adam
                    Title: An introduction to agentâ€based models as an accessible surrogate to fieldâ€based research and teaching  Cord-id: tnt6xbh7  Document date: 2020_10_2
                    ID: tnt6xbh7
                    
                    Snippet: There are many barriers to fieldwork including cost, time, and physical ability. Unfortunately, these barriers disproportionately affect minority communities and create a disparity in access to fieldwork in the natural sciences. Travel restrictions, concerns about our carbon footprint, and the global lockdown have extended this barrier to fieldwork across the community and led to increased anxiety about gaps in productivity, especially among graduate students and earlyâ€career researchers. In t
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: There are many barriers to fieldwork including cost, time, and physical ability. Unfortunately, these barriers disproportionately affect minority communities and create a disparity in access to fieldwork in the natural sciences. Travel restrictions, concerns about our carbon footprint, and the global lockdown have extended this barrier to fieldwork across the community and led to increased anxiety about gaps in productivity, especially among graduate students and earlyâ€career researchers. In this paper, we discuss agentâ€based modeling as an openâ€source, accessible, and inclusive resource to substitute for lost fieldwork during COVIDâ€19 and for future scenarios of travel restrictions such as climate change and economic downturn. We describe the benefits of Agentâ€Based models as a teaching and training resource for students across education levels. We discuss how and why educators and research scientists can implement them with examples from the literature on how agentâ€based models can be applied broadly across life science research. We aim to amplify awareness and adoption of this technique to broaden the diversity and size of the agentâ€based modeling community in ecology and evolutionary research. Finally, we discuss the challenges facing agentâ€based modeling and discuss how quantitative ecology can work in tandem with traditional field ecology to improve both methods.
 
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