Computational Ecology: From the Complex to the Simple and Back
Figure 2
Bridging Dynamics across Organizational Scales
On the left is a detailed model in which individual interactions in a network are described explicitly. On the right, typical “mean field” models aggregate the population into compartments (here for the three subpopulations of susceptible, infected, and recovered individuals in the dynamics of an infectious disease with permanent immunity). Computational approaches can help us understand the relationship between dynamics at these two different scales, from the individual to the population level. We can start with a stochastic individual-based model and develop approximations that simplify it (A). From this process, we can learn about the opposite direction of formulating simple models directly without sufficient knowledge to first specify the detailed interactions and components (B). These simple models represent implicitly the effect of smaller scale variability.