Understanding Human Behaviour: Introduction to Game Theory and Shared Resources
Lead educator |
Dr Agata Komendant-Brodowska (she is from University of Warsaw but collaborates with Wander Jager from UCG on this project) |
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Department |
University College Groningen |
First run |
24-1-2022 |
Explore the issues humans face when sharing and cooperating, and use game theory, models, and simulations to identify solutions.
Expand your understanding of social sciences
This four-week course will help you explore why sharing goods or tasks is difficult. You’ll enrich your understanding of the problems people have when they share and cooperate, and examine essential models that can support you in your future career in social sciences and beyond.
Discover social solutions to help tackle different problems
You’ll have a close-up look at situations when actions (that are rational from an individual point of view) lead to non-optimal social outcomes.
Investigating the mechanisms that underlie the common action and public goods problems, you’ll gain an insight into the behavioural dynamics affecting the ecological crisis we currently face.
You’ll also explore some social solutions to tackle such problems and reflect on the importance of strengthening social ties, norms, social control, sanctions, and institutions.
Understand how to use computational modelling to face challenges
You’ll explore social computation and computational modelling as a useful methodology. With this knowledge, you’ll systematically study the interactions between individual behaviour, group behaviour, and public goods.
Apply game theory and agent-based modelling (ABM) - without prior mathematical or programming skills
You’ll apply the basic concepts from game theory to explain some of the mechanisms behind the overuse of natural resources. This will then help you explore some potential solutions going forward.
Throughout the course, you will use examples, animations, and game-like tools, designed by the experts from University of Warsaw and University of Groningen – no mathematical and programming skills are required!
Find out more about human behaviour on the FutureLearn website or follow #FLsharedresources on Twitter.
Last modified: | 03 February 2022 09.45 a.m. |