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ADAGE: A generic two-layer framework for adaptive agent based modelling

ADAGE: A generic two-layer framework for adaptive agent based modelling ArXiv ID: 2501.09429 “View on arXiv” Authors: Unknown Abstract Agent-based models (ABMs) are valuable for modelling complex, potentially out-of-equilibria scenarios. However, ABMs have long suffered from the Lucas critique, stating that agent behaviour should adapt to environmental changes. Furthermore, the environment itself often adapts to these behavioural changes, creating a complex bi-level adaptation problem. Recent progress integrating multi-agent reinforcement learning into ABMs introduces adaptive agent behaviour, beginning to address the first part of this critique, however, the approaches are still relatively ad hoc, lacking a general formulation, and furthermore, do not tackle the second aspect of simultaneously adapting environmental level characteristics in addition to the agent behaviours. In this work, we develop a generic two-layer framework for ADaptive AGEnt based modelling (ADAGE) for addressing these problems. This framework formalises the bi-level problem as a Stackelberg game with conditional behavioural policies, providing a consolidated framework for adaptive agent-based modelling based on solving a coupled set of non-linear equations. We demonstrate how this generic approach encapsulates several common (previously viewed as distinct) ABM tasks, such as policy design, calibration, scenario generation, and robust behavioural learning under one unified framework. We provide example simulations on multiple complex economic and financial environments, showing the strength of the novel framework under these canonical settings, addressing long-standing critiques of traditional ABMs. ...

January 16, 2025 · 2 min · Research Team

Some New Evidence on Determinants of Foreign Direct Investment in Developing Countries

Some New Evidence on Determinants of Foreign Direct Investment in Developing Countries ArXiv ID: ssrn-623885 “View on arXiv” Authors: Unknown Abstract An export orientation is the strongest variable explaining why a country attracts foreign direct investment. Singh and Jun expand on earlier studies of the d Keywords: Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), Export Orientation, Emerging Markets, Macroeconomics, Macroeconomic Complexity vs Empirical Score Math Complexity: 2.0/10 Empirical Rigor: 3.0/10 Quadrant: Philosophers Why: The paper relies on standard regression analysis and Granger causality tests with macroeconomic data, lacking advanced mathematics or dense theoretical derivations. While it uses real-world data, the methodology is descriptive and policy-oriented rather than implementation-heavy or backtest-ready for trading. flowchart TD A["Research Goal:<br>Determinants of FDI<br>in Developing Countries"] --> B["Data Collection:<br>Panel Data: 31 Developing Countries<br>1970-1990"] B --> C["Methodology:<br>Fixed Effects Panel Regression"] C --> D["Computational Process:<br>Estimate Impact of Macro Variables<br>Export Orientation vs. Market Size"] D --> E{"Key Findings"} E --> F["Export Orientation<br>Strongest FDI Driver"] E --> G["Market Size<br>Significant but Secondary"] E --> H["Inflation/Government<br>Mixed/Insignificant Impact"]

April 20, 2016 · 1 min · Research Team