Computational Model Library

THE STATUS ARENA (1.0.0)

This article investigates self-organised social causation of the near-ubiquitous phenomenon that females have lower social status on average than males. An agent-based model of a virtual schoolyard was created that uses status-power theory as a basis for the children’s behaviour. The children assemble in changing groups and mutually confer status. The status conferred upon a child modifies the status it holds. If a child deems it receives too little status, it may pick a fight. The group may condone or condemn a fight. We included children’s traits (kindness, beauty, and physical power), schoolyard culture (social acceptability of fighting) and behavioural strategy (amount of rough-and-tumble play). Running many trials of the model we found that in time, depending on the parameter settings, a gender-based status gap emerged. Gender-based differences in children’s traits alone had comparatively little effect. Rough-and-tumble play had more impact on emergent status differences than did physical power differences. Social acceptability of fighting also strongly moderated the resulting status gap. Empirical findings of child behaviour studies at schools show common ground with our model results. We conclude from this that the status-power theory we used merits use in studying the dynamics of other issues in child development, or indeed in social behaviour in general.

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Release Notes

Associated Publications

Hofstede, Gert Jan; Jillian Student; Mark R. Kramer (2018) The status arena: A comprehensive agent-based model of social status dynamics and gender in groups of children. AI & Society (Open Access). Available at http://rdcu.be/EoK9.

Here is a youtube playlist of videos in which Gert Jan describes the model: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXZq5xNSvGBxMHvz5HoX_LX2mMGDxgKub

This release is out-of-date. The latest version is 1.1.0

THE STATUS ARENA 1.0.0

This article investigates self-organised social causation of the near-ubiquitous phenomenon that females have lower social status on average than males. An agent-based model of a virtual schoolyard was created that uses status-power theory as a basis for the children’s behaviour. The children assemble in changing groups and mutually confer status. The status conferred upon a child modifies the status it holds. If a child deems it receives too little status, it may pick a fight. The group may condone or condemn a fight. We included children’s traits (kindness, beauty, and physical power), schoolyard culture (social acceptability of fighting) and behavioural strategy (amount of rough-and-tumble play). Running many trials of the model we found that in time, depending on the parameter settings, a gender-based status gap emerged. Gender-based differences in children’s traits alone had comparatively little effect. Rough-and-tumble play had more impact on emergent status differences than did physical power differences. Social acceptability of fighting also strongly moderated the resulting status gap. Empirical findings of child behaviour studies at schools show common ground with our model results. We conclude from this that the status-power theory we used merits use in studying the dynamics of other issues in child development, or indeed in social behaviour in general.

Version Submitter First published Last modified Status
1.1.0 Gert Hofstede Tue Jan 9 19:35:05 2018 Sun Feb 18 07:23:41 2018 Published
1.0.0 Gert Hofstede Wed Jun 8 13:27:12 2016 Sat Feb 24 08:40:46 2018 Published

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