Wednesday, November 25, 2009
An Agent-Based Model for H1N1: The Movie
Actually, several movies.* I thought I'd share a few talks I've given at conferences with the broader community. Unfortunately, the only thing we can't do with this approach is to have follow-up questions and discussions. As that is really the best part of any talk, I hope you'll consider posting your questions or comments about the screencasts here. For more details about the model, see the rest of my series on ABMs for H1N1.
In the first two videos I explain why I think that Agent-Based Models are indispensable tools for understanding complex phenomena.
In the second series I use the H1N1 epidemic model that I've discussed here before to show how we can design and execute an Agent-based Model in H1N1.
I'd love to hear what you think -- feedback about presentation and content is especially appreciated.
*Even though I have support for quicktime streaming on my web-server, I thought that putting it on YouTube would make them more accessible. It wasn't aware of this before now but YouTube has a ten-minute limit. This turned out to be a good thing as it meant that I actually spent some time (quite a bit bit of time actually) editing and cleaning things up. So hopefully these presentations will actually be better than the rambling talks I always seem to end up delivering at conferences!
In the first two videos I explain why I think that Agent-Based Models are indispensable tools for understanding complex phenomena.
In the second series I use the H1N1 epidemic model that I've discussed here before to show how we can design and execute an Agent-based Model in H1N1.
I'd love to hear what you think -- feedback about presentation and content is especially appreciated.
*Even though I have support for quicktime streaming on my web-server, I thought that putting it on YouTube would make them more accessible. It wasn't aware of this before now but YouTube has a ten-minute limit. This turned out to be a good thing as it meant that I actually spent some time (quite a bit bit of time actually) editing and cleaning things up. So hopefully these presentations will actually be better than the rambling talks I always seem to end up delivering at conferences!
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Your videos are great, highly educative and easy to tackle, congratulations!
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