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Herd behavior in a complex adaptive system

TLDR
It is reported that, as long as the ratio of the two resources for allocation is biased enough, the formation of a typically sized herd can help the system to reach the balanced state.
Abstract
In order to survive, self-serving agents in various kinds of complex adaptive systems (CASs) must compete against others for sharing limited resources with biased or unbiased distribution by conducting strategic behaviors. This competition can globally result in the balance of resource allocation. As a result, most of the agents and species can survive well. However, it is a common belief that the formation of a herd in a CAS will cause excess volatility, which can ruin the balance of resource allocation in the CAS. Here this belief is challenged with the results obtained from a modeled resource-allocation system. Based on this system, we designed and conducted a series of computer-aided human experiments including herd behavior. We also performed agent-based simulations and theoretical analyses, in order to confirm the experimental observations and reveal the underlying mechanism. We report that, as long as the ratio of the two resources for allocation is biased enough, the formation of a typically sized herd can help the system to reach the balanced state. This resource ratio also serves as the critical point for a class of phase transition identified herein, which can be used to discover the role change of herd behavior, from a ruinous one to a helpful one. This work is also of value to some fields, ranging from management and social science, to ecology and evolution, and to physics.

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Following the crowd or avoiding it? Empirical investigation of imitative behaviour in emergency escape of human crowds

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report on novel way-finding decision experiments that simulated the escape of human crowds from multi-exit spaces and find that people's dominant wayfinding strategy was not to copy the escape directions that other people (i.e. the majority) chose.
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Experimental econophysics: Complexity, self-organization, and emergent properties

TL;DR: Experimental econophysics is concerned with statistical physics of humans in the laboratory, and it is based on controlled human experiments developed by physicists to study some problems related to economics or finance as discussed by the authors.
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Agent-based model with asymmetric trading and herding for complex financial systems.

TL;DR: It is revealed that for the leverage and anti-leverage effects, both the investors’ asymmetric trading and herding are essential generation mechanisms.
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Panic, Irrationality, and Herding: Three Ambiguous Terms in Crowd Dynamics Research

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the literature on panic, irrationality, and herding in the field of crowd dynamics is presented, highlighting the importance of distinguishing between the social influence on various aspects of evacuation behavior and avoiding generalization across various behavioural layers.
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Synchronization in human musical rhythms and mutually interacting complex systems.

TL;DR: The general statistical properties underlying musical interaction were uncovered by observing two individuals synchronizing rhythms and it was found that the interbeat intervals between individuals exhibit scale-free cross-correlations, i.e., the next beat played by an individual is dependent on the entire history of their partner’s interbeat interval.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Simple Model of Herd Behavior

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze a sequential decision model in which each decision maker looks at the decisions made by previous decision makers in taking her own decision, and they show that the decision rules that are chosen by optimizing individuals will be characterized by herd behavior.
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A study of normative and informational social influences upon individual judgment.

TL;DR: Several modifications of the Asch experiment in which the S judges the length of lines in the company of a group of “stooges” who carry out the experimenter's instructions are described.
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Geometry for the selfish herd.

TL;DR: An antithesis to the view that gregarious behaviour is evolved through benefits to the population or species is presented, and simply defined models are used to show that even in non-gregarious species selection is likely to favour individuals who stay close to others.
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Prediction and entropy of printed English

TL;DR: A new method of estimating the entropy and redundancy of a language is described, which exploits the knowledge of the language statistics possessed by those who speak the language, and depends on experimental results in prediction of the next letter when the preceding text is known.
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Learning from the behavior of others : conformity, fads, and informational cascades

TL;DR: The authors argue that the theory of observational learning, and particularly of informational cascades, has much to offer economics, business strategy, political science, and the study of criminal behavior, which can help explain some otherwise puzzling phenomena about human behavior.
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