Article ID: | iaor20106246 |
Volume: | 4 |
Issue: | 3 |
Start Page Number: | 196 |
End Page Number: | 203 |
Publication Date: | Sep 2010 |
Journal: | Journal of Simulation |
Authors: | Chen C-C, Hardoon D R |
Keywords: | biology |
This paper presents a novel approach towards showing how specific emergent multi-level behaviours in agent-based simulations (ABSs) can be quantified and used as the basis for inferring predictive models. First, we first show how behaviours at different levels can be specified and detected in a simulation using the complex event formalism. We then apply partial least squares regression to frequencies of these behaviours to infer models predicting the global behaviour of the system from lower-level behaviours. By comparing the mean predictive errors of models learned from different subsets of behavioural frequencies, we are also able to determine the relative importance of different types of behaviour and different resolutions. These methods are applied to ABSs of a novel agent-based model of cancer in the colonic crypt, with tumorigenesis as the global behaviour we wish to predict.