A cognitive model of crowd behavior based on Social Comparison Theory

Gal A. Kaminka, Natalie Fridman

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

Modeling crowd behavior is an important challenge for cognitive modelers. Models of crowd behavior facilitate analysis and prediction of the behavior of groups of people, who are in close geographical or logical states, and that are affected by each other's presence and actions. Existing models of crowd behavior, in a variety of fields, leave many open challenges. In particular, psychological models often offer only qualitative description, and do not easily permit algorithmic replication, while computer science models are often simplistic, treating agents as simple deterministic particles. We propose a novel model of crowd behavior, based on Festinger's Social Comparison Theory (SCT), a social psychology theory known and expanded since the early 1950's. We propose a concrete algorithmic framework for SCT, and evaluate its implementations in several crowd behavior scenarios. We show that our SCT model produces improved results compared to base models from the literature. We also discuss an implementation of SCT in the Soar cognitive architecture, and the question this implementation raises as to the role of social reasoning in cognitive architectures.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCognitive Modeling and Agent-Based Social Simulation - Papers from the AAAI Workshop, Technical Report
Pages25-35
Number of pages11
StatePublished - 2006
Event2006 AAAI Workshop - Boston, MA, United States
Duration: 16 Jul 200617 Jul 2006

Publication series

NameAAAI Workshop - Technical Report
VolumeWS-06-02

Conference

Conference2006 AAAI Workshop
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityBoston, MA
Period16/07/0617/07/06

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