The IRMA Community
Newsletters
Research IRM
Click a keyword to search titles using our InfoSci-OnDemand powered search:
|
Avatar-Based Modeling of Digital Communication in Political Conflicts
|
Author(s): Ekaterina Yuryevna Aleshina (Penza State University, Russia), Vardan Mkrttchian (HHH University, Australia)and Leyla Ayvarovna Gamidullaeva (Penza State University, Russia)
Copyright: 2020
Pages: 10
Source title:
Avatar-Based Models, Tools, and Innovation in the Digital Economy
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Vardan Mkrttchian (HHH University, Australia), Leyla Gamidullaeva (Penza State University, Russia)and Ekaterina Aleshina (Penza State University, Russia)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-1104-6.ch004
Purchase
|
Abstract
Many of the findings within the data have generated more questions than answers; but in doing so, illuminated several paths of further investigation that may provide greater insights into the complexities of stabilizing troubled states. This chapter then, is a starting point on a journey to discover more effective means to deliver humanitarian and development aid to conflicted societies without doing greater harm in the process. Holland discusses the utility of flight simulators in helping commercial airline pilots experience a variety of scenarios that would be unthinkable to expose passengers to in the real world. The value of the pilot's experience in the simulator depends on how closely the simulator matches the aircraft it models. With even greater numbers of lives and resources at stake, utilizing agent-based modeling as a policy simulator would allow leaders to experiment with numerous response and intervention strategies in a very short period of time.
Related Content
Emre Meriç, Zindan Çakıcı.
© 2024.
23 pages.
|
Nemanja Milošević.
© 2024.
22 pages.
|
Övünç Ege.
© 2024.
13 pages.
|
Serkan Karatay, Başak Gezmen.
© 2024.
19 pages.
|
Ceren Saran.
© 2024.
31 pages.
|
Maria Roberta Novielli.
© 2024.
13 pages.
|
Hasan Gürkan, Aslı Güngör-Eral.
© 2024.
17 pages.
|
|
|