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Growing the simulation ecosystem: introducing Mesa Data to provide transparent, accessible, and extensible data pipelines for simulation development.
- Source :
-
Simulation . May2023, Vol. 99 Issue 5, p493-502. 10p. - Publication Year :
- 2023
-
Abstract
- The agent-based model (ABM) community has a rich and diverse ecosystem of libraries, platforms, and applications to help modelers develop rigorous simulations. Despite this robust and diverse ecosystem, the complexity of life from microbial communities to the global ecosystem still presents substantial challenges in making reusable code that can optimize the ability of knowledge-sharing and reproducibility. This research seeks to provide new tools to mitigate some of these challenges by offering a vision of a more holistic ecosystem that takes researchers and practitioners from the data collection through validation, with transparent, accessible, and extensible subcomponents. This proposed approach is demonstrated through two data pipelines (crop yield and synthetic population) that take users from data download through cleaning and processing until users have data that can be integrated into an ABM. These pipelines are built to be transparent by walking users step by step through the process, accessible by being skill scalable so users can leverage them without code or with code, and extensible by being freely available on the coding sharing repository GitHub to facilitate community development. Reusing code that simulates complex phenomena is a significant challenge but one that must be consistently addressed to help the community move forward. This research seeks to aid that progress by offering potential new tools extended from the already robust ecosystem to help the community collaborate more effectively internally and across disciplines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 00375497
- Volume :
- 99
- Issue :
- 5
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Simulation
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 163452815
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1177/00375497221077425