DocumentCode
2762912
Title
Emergent models of wellness: a case study of management practices in single resident occupant hotels of Vancouver CA
Author
Alexiuk, Mark D. ; Wiebe, Gordon K. ; Pizzi, Nick J.
Author_Institution
Manitoba Univ., Winnipeg, Man.
fYear
2005
fDate
1-4 May 2005
Firstpage
1586
Lastpage
1589
Abstract
Emergence is the phenomenon of collective intelligence exhibited by a population of independent agents (the swarm). The theory of emergence has become a useful framework for exploring salient features of dynamical systems. This framework provides insight into hitherto intractable problems in sociology and economics. One such problem is the definition of a mathematical model of homelessness that enables policy evaluation with respect to the holistic wellness of the impacted individuals. Swarm simulations provide numerical and visual results to the researcher allowing both quantitative and intuitive hypothesis testing. This paper defines a basic swarm model of homelessness, details some initial experiments and provides justification for a dynamical systems model. A description of a survey taken in an area of Vancouver with high rates of homelessness is also provided
Keywords
emergent phenomena; management; testing; Vancouver CA; dynamical systems model; economics; homelessness; hypothesis testing; management practices; single resident occupant hotels; sociology; swarm model; swarm simulations; wellness emergent models; Computer aided software engineering;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2005. Canadian Conference on
Conference_Location
Saskatoon, Sask.
ISSN
0840-7789
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8885-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CCECE.2005.1557285
Filename
1557285
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