Effects of agent heterogeneity in the presence of a land-market

A systematic test in an agent-based laboratory

Journal Article (2013)
Author(s)

Qingxu Huang (Beijing Normal University)

Dawn C. Parker (University of Waterloo)

Shipeng Sun (University of Minnesota Twin Cities)

T. Filatova (University of Twente)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compenvurbsys.2013.06.004
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Publication Year
2013
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Volume number
41
Pages (from-to)
188-203

Abstract

Representing agent heterogeneity is one of the main reasons that agent-based models become increasingly popular in simulating the emergence of land-use, land-cover change and socioeconomic phenomena. However, the relationship between heterogeneous economic agents and the resultant landscape patterns and socioeconomic dynamics has not been systematically explored. In this paper, we present a stylized agent-based land market model, Land Use in eXurban Environments (LUXE), to study the effects of multidimensional agents' heterogeneity on the spatial and socioeconomic patterns of urban land use change under various market representations. We examined two sources of agent heterogeneity: budget heterogeneity, which imposes constraints on the affordability of land, and preference heterogeneity, which determines location choice. The effects of the two dimensions of agents' heterogeneity are systematically explored across different market representations by three experiments. Agents' heterogeneity exhibits a complex interplay with various forms of market institutions as indicated by macro-measures (landscape metrics, segregation index, and socioeconomic metrics). In general, budget heterogeneity has pronounced effect on socioeconomic results, while preference heterogeneity is highly pertinent to spatial outcomes. The relationship between agent heterogeneity and macro-measures becomes more complex when more land market mechanisms are represented. In other words, appropriately simulating agent heterogeneity plays an important role in guaranteeing the fidelity of replicating empirical land use change process.

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