2015
DOI: 10.18564/jasss.2550
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Interactive Simulations with a Stylized Scale Model to Codesign with Villagers an Agent-Based Model of Bushmeat Hunting in the Periphery of Korup National Park (Cameroon)

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Cited by 15 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Further references are available in Le Page et al. (). The computer code and the full documentation (including ODD) are available from the CoMSES Net Computational Model Library.…”
Section: Application Of the 4p Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further references are available in Le Page et al. (). The computer code and the full documentation (including ODD) are available from the CoMSES Net Computational Model Library.…”
Section: Application Of the 4p Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ComMod processes have been conducted in various contexts in the past decades, such as land-use management in Senegal (d 'Aquino et al 2003, d'Aquino andBah 2014), conflicts over water management in Thailand (Barnaud et al 2006(Barnaud et al , 2008 and Bhutan , collective awareness of sustainable use of reed beds (Mathevet et al 2007), and hunting practices in African tropical forests (Le Page et al 2015). The objects used for and produced through participation are "boundary objects" linking different actors belonging to different social worlds but involved in a common process (Vinck 2009, Queste et al 2011.…”
Section: Companion Modeling: Collective Sense Making and Boundary Objmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dumrongrojwatthana et al (2011) applied a variant on this approach to study resource tradeoffs among herders and foresters in Thailand, in which initial participatory exercises led to co-production of a model for changes in vegetation state; this early joint product led to a 'computerassisted RPG' or cRPG, which eliminated calculations of vegetation growth that would have been cumbersome for a paper-based game, and allowed stakeholders to engage directly and early on with a part of the computer simulation. Moving further along this spectrum, Le Page et al (2015) brought bushmeat hunters from Cameroon directly into the development of an ABM, beginning with a simple small-scale abstraction of an inhabited forest system, and building participant feedback into progressively larger-scale efforts at capturing the overall system through a series of three workshops. While framed field and lab experiments capture participant response to a carefully controlled, stylized decision, the ComMod approach allows a detailed and rich decision structure to emerge from the participants; however, this richness comes at the expense of cost, time, and representativeness, with the resulting decision structure being highly tailored to the particular system and group of participants in the study.…”
Section: Participatory Workhops and Gamesmentioning
confidence: 99%