Introduction to Model Thinking

2019/01/12

Why model?

As I understood, using models is actually to apply mathematic into different problems in a unified framework.

Intelligent Citizen of the world

Essentially, all models are wrong, but some are useful

Model is the new “lingua franca”.

Clearer Thinker.

Constructing models includes several steps:

  1. Name the parts: name all variables, factors, and constraints in the problem that are really matter, relevant to the problem. 2.

Understand data

Decide, Strategize, and Design

Courses

Section Structure

Definitions

Types of model:

Segregation and peer effects

Sorting (homophily) and peer effects

Peer Effect

We choose to act like other people around us. For example, if we are hanging around with people who smoke, it is likely that over time, we also become smoker.

Sorting

We choose to live, hangout with people with the same characteristics like us. For example, If we smoke, we want to like, or stay with people who smoke like us.

The group tends to have the same characteristics among its members.

Schelling Tipping Model

Racial segregation in New York

Racial segregation in New York

1R 2B  3W
4B Rx  5R
6B 7R  8B

The agents deciding whether stay at the current location or move out bases on theirs neighbors who have the same characteristics. The rule is used a threshold to decide. For example, if there are more than 30% neighbors like me, I will stay.

This is a model of racial (or outcome) segregation.

Observations: Even though people are tolerate, at the macro level we observe the segregation, segmentation in large-scale region. If people set their threshold especially high, that makes the whole region chaotic.

Micromotives != macrobehaviour

Exodus Tip: one agent moving causes others to move as well. Genesis Tip: some agents moving makes the agent move out.

$$ {1 \over 2} \sum_{i=1}^{N} \left| {a_i\over A} - {b_i \over B} \right | $$

Let $A$ and $B$ are the total of agents of demographics type 1 and type 2, respectively; $a_i$ and $b_i$ is the number of agents of each demographics in an area.

Granovetter Model

The collective behavior, e.g., social movement.

Standing Ovation Model

We change our behavior to match out with people around us.

Identification problem

If we observe the segregation in data, the question is did they sort the behavior, or is this the peer effect?