[FRIAM] Fwd: CSSSA April Webinar
steve smith
sasmyth at swcp.com
Sun Apr 6 13:47:42 EDT 2025
new prompt for Trump Apologists:
"Rewrite the ABM in a manner which makes the current US Trade,
Immigration, and DEI policies look like a brilliant move. Push
statistics, charts and rhetoric widely across the internet. Shoot
the dog and goat, deport some folks you don't like the look of and
go declare yourself winner of the golf tournament at your own golf
course."
On 4/5/25 3:47 PM, Stephen Guerin wrote:
> Here's a web version of Marcus's prompt:
> "write an html/javascript ABM of U.S. trade that considers the
> deficit, debt, trade imbalances, and international capital flows."
>
> this runs directly in the Claude web context with no downloads or setup.
>
> And here is copying the page and deploying to play with the dog.
>
> https://guerin.acequia.io/sandbox/marcus-claude-economy.html
>
> Old joke applies: ""It's not that the dog talks well, it's that it
> talks at all."
> _________________________________________________________________
> Stephen Guerin
> CEO, Founder
> https://simtable.com
> stephen.guerin at simtable.com
>
> stephenguerin at fas.harvard.edu
> Harvard Visualization Research and Teaching Lab
> <https://hwpi.harvard.edu/eps-visualization-research-laboratory/home>
>
> mobile: (505)577-5828
>
>
> On Sat, Apr 5, 2025 at 3:24 PM Marcus Daniels <marcus at snoutfarm.com>
> wrote:
>
> 1. Download Github Copilot. Add Python module.
> 2. Get a Claude Console subscription. Select Claude Sonnet 3.7
> in Github Copilot.
> 3. Open the Chat window and select Agent.
> 4. Enter “Can you write an ABM of U.S. trade that considers the
> deficit, debt, trade imbalances, and international capital
> flows. Watch project be populated.
> 5. Press Run.
> 6. Play with dog.
>
> *From: *Friam <friam-bounces at redfish.com> on behalf of Pieter
> Steenekamp <pieters at randcontrols.co.za>
> *Date: *Saturday, April 5, 2025 at 3:45 AM
> *To: *The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
> <friam at redfish.com>
> *Subject: *Re: [FRIAM] Fwd: CSSSA April Webinar
>
> I listened to the above webinar on Agent-Based Modeling (ABM) in
> Economics and Finance, and would like to share a few reflections:
>
> It would be wonderful to see this discipline develop further. In
> fields like transportation planning, ABM has already matured to a
> point where it arguably outperforms traditional top-down
> approaches. A few years ago in South Africa, ABM was used in
> planning a major public transport upgrade in Gauteng. I followed
> the project closely and, in my view, it was a great success. My
> friend Johan Joubert led the modeling effort, and the results were
> impressive.
>
> But let me return to ABM in the context of Economics and Finance.
>
> I understand that building effective ABM models in these domains
> is significantly more challenging than in transportation. Yet,
> imagine the value if it becomes a reality. The U.S., for example,
> is grappling with major economic issues: a growing federal
> deficit, mounting government debt, a persistent trade imbalance,
> and a population—especially the lower half—feeling economically
> left behind. Wouldn’t it be exciting if ABM could contribute to
> practical, data-driven solutions to these kinds of complex problems?
>
> I was a bit disappointed that the webinar didn’t mention the
> potential integration of ABM with AI models in the context of
> Economics and Finance. There’s so much potential here. Large
> language models (LLMs) could help generate more nuanced and
> adaptable ABM scenarios, while ABM could provide rich, dynamic
> environments to train and refine AI models—especially
> reinforcement learning systems aimed at supporting policy-making.
> I’m optimistic that this kind of synergy will emerge in the near
> future.
>
> On Sat, 29 Mar 2025 at 09:53, Stephen Guerin
> <stephen.guerin at simtable.com> wrote:
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ---------
> From: *Computational Social Science Society of the Americas*
> <newsletter at computationalsocialscience.org>
> Date: Fri, Mar 28, 2025, 7:10 PM
> Subject: CSSSA April Webinar
> To: <stephen.guerin at simtable.com>
>
> View this email in your browser
> <https://mailchi.mp/6007323ec35a/csssa-april-webinar?e=8cb4039763>
>
>
> Image removed by sender.
>
>
> Dear CSSSA members,
> We are very excited to host *Robert Axtell and Doyne
> Farmer* discussing* “Agent-Based Modeling in the Economics
> and Finence*” in our 2025 webinar series on *Wednesday,
> April 2nd, at 10 am (ET) . **Click here to register for the
> webinar*
> <https://computationalsocialscience.us9.list-manage.com/track/click?u=4f667f8d01c7a2b9a0490726c&id=2172fd08e1&e=8cb4039763>
>
>
> Image removed by sender.
>
>
> *Abstract*
> In a long paper in the /Journal of Economic Literature/ Axtell
> and Farmer review agent-based modeling (ABM) in economics and
> finance and highlight how it can be used to relax conventional
> assumptions in standard models. ABM has enriched the
> understanding of markets, industrial organization, labor,
> macro, development, and environmental economics. In finance,
> substantial accomplishments include understanding clustered
> volatility, market impact, systemic risk, and housing markets.
> A vision is presented for how ABMs might be used in the future
> to build more realistic models of the economy. Hurdles that
> must be overcome to achieve this are discussed. Their paper
> includes more than 800 references including many from adjacent
> fields.
>
> Biographs
> *Professor Axtell* is the author, with Joshua Epstein, of
> Growing Artificial Societies: Social Science from the Bottom
> Up (MIT Press). His research has appeared in /Science/,
> /Nature/, /Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences/,
> as well as in leading field-specific journals such as /The
> Journal of Economic Literature, The American Economic Review/,
> /The Economic/ /Journal/, and many others. His research has
> been reprised in newspapers (e.g., /Wall St. Journal/, /Los
> Angeles Times/, /Washington Post/) and science magazines
> (e.g., /Scientific American/, /Technology Review, Wired/). For
> the past decade he has been using microdata on individuals to
> build large-scale models of the Financial Crisis of 2008-9
> (with JD Farmer, Oxford, and J Geanakoplos, Yale), the
> dynamics of business firms (with O Guerrero, Turing
> Institute), and natural resource exploitation, e.g., fisheries
> (with UC Santa Barbara, Oxford, and the Ocean Conservancy).
> The research on companies is described at length in a
> forthcoming book, ‘Dynamics of Firms from the Bottom Up: Data,
> Theories, and Models’, due out next year, which uses U.S.
> micro-data on firm sizes, ages, growth rates, networks, and
> locations to create a model at 1:1 scale with the American
> economy.
>
> *Prof. Doyne Farmer* is an American complex systems scientist
> and entrepreneur with interests in chaos theory, complexity
> and econophysics. He has published papers in /Science/ and
> /Nature/ as well as leading economics journals like the
> /Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization/. He is Baillie
> Gifford Professor of Complex Systems Science at the Smith
> School of Enterprise and the Environment, Oxford University,
> where he is also director of the Complexity Economics
> programme at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the
> Oxford Martin School. Additionally, he is an external
> professor at the Santa Fe Institute. His current research is
> on complexity economics, focusing on systemic risk in
> financial markets and technological progress. He has recently
> published a book entitled ‘Making Sense of Chaos: A Better
> Economics for a Better World.’
>
> CSSSA Secretary is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.
>
> Topic: CSSSA April Webinar
> Time: Apr 2, 2025 10:00 AM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
> Join Zoom Meeting
> https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82181451627?pwd=uYQJrmdphT9pefWvGKbhQgxQby3beG.1
>
> Meeting ID: 821 8145 1627
> Passcode: csssa2025
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