Keywords
agent-based modeling, exchange, kinship networks
Abstract
In the North American Southwest, archaeological research has documented ceramic exchange networks in which spatially proximate households in consumer communities have greatly varying amounts of imported pottery. This paper uses agent-based modelling to gain insight into the processes responsible for these distributions. The agent-based model used here tracks kinship ties among agents representing individuals who give birth, marry, co-reside with spouses, and exchange things in a virtual landscape filled with small settlements of up to a few hundred individuals. Exchange of goods in the model flows through the kinship networks. The results suggest that the differential distribution of goods among spatially proximate households seen in the archaeological cases could result from a small-world network that forms as some individuals move to join spouses in far-off settlements, giving relatives in their home settlement preferential access to exchange goods originating in distant places.
Original Publication Citation
James R. Allison 2017 Agent-Based Modelling of the Relationships among Kinship, Residence, and Exchange. Paper presented at the 45th Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology Conference, Atlanta, Georgia.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Allison, James R., "Agent-Based Modelling of the Relationships among Kinship, Residence, and Exchange" (2017). Faculty Publications. 6627.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/6627
Document Type
Conference Paper
Publication Date
2017
Publisher
Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology
Language
English
College
Family, Home, and Social Sciences
Department
Anthropology
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