The Tyranny of Small Decisions

How did we get to where we are today?

William Odum highlighted the importance of small decisions effects on wider environmental issues and management — the “tyranny of small decisions” as it is has been called. When the accretion of small decisions give rise to broader scale events and phenomena, the results that emerge are not necessarily optimal for society or the environment.

In the case of my PhD study area an important issue is the sustainable maintenance of the relationship between fire, vegetation and human activity across landscape, as a result of land use decisions made by individual humans within that landscape. To ignore the potential effects of these small decisions on the wider environment could prove costly.

Equally, when studying these effects of these individual decisions, the reciprocal effects of changes in the wider environment (e.g. the wildfire regime) upon them shouldn’t be omitted. The tyranny of small decisions means that any model of landscape change in needs to represent the feedbacks between individual decisions and the landscape consequences. Agent-based modelling, integrated with a cellular automata is one way I’m attempting to do this.

But these feedbacks don’t only happen in space across landscapes, they happen over time through one’s life. All the small minute-by-minute decisions that have led me to be where I am now. Individual minute-by-minute decisions made now, with an eye to future based on past experience. If making a decision at the current time is dependent upon one’s situation at the present time, which in turn has arisen due to past decisions, have those past decisions reduced the viable options one has open at the present time? Or have as many new doors opened as closed?

The tyranny of minute decisions. Why every minute counts. Any why we’ll never know whether a decision was the right or wrong one to make until all our minutes have gone…

Reference
Odum, W.E. 1982 Environmental Degradation and the Tyranny of Small Decisions Bioscience 32:9

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Lester Brown: Plan B 2.0

We went straight from the pub to Lester Brown’s lecture at MSU this evening so I didn’t have a pen or pad of paper with me. I need to jot something down before I forget so why don’t I blog it…

President of the Earth Policy Institute, Lester Brown’s talk was based largely around his recently updated book Plan B 2.0. Essentially this was an ecological economics discussion, and many of his examples echoed what I heard at the THEMES summer school earlier this year (did I blog that yet? I should). For example, one clear message was that biofuels (ethanol) is NOT a viable alternative to gasoline for running cars; the resources and area demanded to grow the products to produce the biofuel are to great to ensure it’s economic or ecological viability. A more sustainable alternative presented was wind power; the US could satisfy its annual electricity needs by installing wind turbines in just the three windiest states (I forget which they are). If the number of hybrid electricity/gasoline cars increased this wind power could be efficiently harnessed, stored and used for travel.

Orders for wind turbines globally are so high that waiting lists for production currently stretch to 2008. Why not use the infrastructure already in place in the form of automobile factories to constuct these wind turbines? Unfeasible? Not possible? The example of the shift from automobilie manufacture to arms manufacture in the US during the second World War shows that “where there’s a will there’s a way”.

But do we want have the will? Are we in denial? Why is it so easy to persuade ourselves that there isn’t a problem? Lester Brown suggests that one reason is that we’re not doing our economics properly; we’re hiding many of the costs of the products we produce just as Enron did before their collapse. It may only ‘cost’ $3 to produce a packet of cigarettes (at least that’s the cost they could sell at before tax), but when you factor in ecological and human health into the equation we find that it actually costs $7 in terms of ecosystem and health services.

Echoing Al Gore in his recent movie (still need to blog about that), unless the environmental question is on the lips of the constituent when they meet their political representative, these issues can get swept under the carpet. We need to have the will to make the necessary changes, and we need to let our politicians know we want that change.

And I need to get some sleep so that my presentation tomorrow doesn’t collapse into farce…

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Naveh’s Holistic Landscape Ecology

(or “One of the reasons I’ve ended up doing what I’m doing“)

I don’t know if he was the first to come up with the term, but I first read about holistic landscape ecology in a couple of papers by Prof. Zev Naveh (in 2001 during my third year undergrad course at King’s, ‘Landscape Ecology’ run by Dr. George Perry). Whilst reading today I came across some old notes I made from one of those papers (not terribly critical as you can see!?). Distinguished Professors of a Certain Age are allowed licence to run riot with their accumulated wisdom as you can see. I’m not being facetious – they can write bigger ‘blue skies’, ‘call to arms’ pieces than other (more lowly) academics.

These are the two papers that really got me interested anwyay (as well as my Disertation; finally, as a 3rd year undergrad!?). I think I thought something along the lines of, “there are problems here that we should be thinking about now and this guy is suggesting a paradigm of how we might start approaching them scientifically“. I think they’re one of the reasons I started a MSc (“I can’t stop now I’ve only just found this stuff“), and then later continued onto this ‘ere PhD (“this is interesting – I want to keep going“).

Later I got to these questions;

  • What sort of scientific tools and methods will we need to address problems that we have in our socio-environmental systems now?
  • How do we integrate tools and methods from different scientific disciplines? (i.e. how do we really become ‘inter-disciplinary’?)
  • What sort of science will this be? Normal? Post-Normal? Something else?

It could take a while to answer these – but it doesn’t seem like we’ve got that long. We’ll have to work them out as we go along I think…

Refs

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Applications of Complex Systems to Social Sciences

I’ve recently returned from the GIACS summer school in Poland: Applications of Complex Systems to Social Sciences. Whilst not a social scientist, I am interested in the incorporation of aspects of human/social behaviour into models of the physical environment and its change. I thought this summer school might be an opportunity to get a glimpse at what the future of modelling these systems might be, and how others are approaching investigation of social phenomena.

The set of lecturers was composed of a Psychologist, three Physicists (P1, P2, and P3), a Geographer, and an Economist. I’m sure plenty of ‘real social scientists’ wouldn’t be too happy with what some of these modellers are doing with their differential equations, cellular automata, agent-based models and network theory. One of the students I spoke to (a social psychologist) complained that these guys were modelling social systems but not humans; another (a computer scientist interested in robotics) suggested the models were too ‘reactive’ rather than ‘proactive’. Pertinent comments I think, and ones that made me realise that to really understand what was going on would need me to take a step back and look at the broader modelling panorama.

Some of the toughest comments from the school attendees were levelled at the Geographer’s model (or “virtual Geography”) that attempts to capture the patterns of population growth observed for European cities, using a mechanistic approach based on the representation of economic processes. The main criticism was that the large parameter space of this model (i.e. a large number of interacting parameters) makes the model very difficult to analyse, interpret and understand. Such criticisms were certainly valid and have been previously observed by other modellers of geographic systems. However, the same criticisms could not be levelled at the models presented at the physicists’ (and psychologist’s) models, simply because their models have far fewer parameters.

And so this, I think, is the one of the problems that the social psychologist and cognitive scientist alluded to; the majority of the models arising from the techniques of physics (and mathematics) are generally interested in the system properties as whole and not individual interactions and components. One or two key state variables (a variable used to describe the state of the system) are reported and analysed. But actually, there’s nothing wrong with this approach because of the nature of their models, based as they are on very simple assumptions and largely homogenous in the agents, actors and interactions they considered.

Such an approach didn’t settle well with the social psychologist because the agents being modelled are supposed to be representative of humans; humans are individuals that make decisions based on their individual preferences and understandings. The computer scientists didn’t want to know about broad decision-making strategies – he wants his robot to be able to make the right decision in individual, specific situations (i.e. move left and survive not right and fall off a cliff). Understanding broad system properties of homogenous agents and interactions is no good to these guys.

It’s also why the Geographer’s model stood out from the rest – it actually tries to recreate European urban development (or more specifically, “Simulate the emergence of a system of cities functionally differentiated from initial configurations of settlements and resources, development parameters and interaction rules”). It’a a model that attempts to understand the system within its context. [One other model presented that did model a specific system within its context was presented by the Economist’s model (“virtual archaeology”) of the population dynamics of the lost Kayenta Anasazi civilisation in New Mexico. This model also has a large parameter space but performed well largely (I’d suggest) because it was driven by such good data for parameterisation (though some parameter tuning was clearly needed).]

So no, there is nothing wrong with an approach that considers homogenous agents, actors and interactions with simple rules. It’s just that these models are more divorced from ‘reality’ – they are looking at the essence of the system properties that arise from the simplest of starting conditions. What is really happening here it that the systems that have not be modelled previously because of the problems of quantitative representation of systems of ‘middle numbers’ (i.e. systems that have neither so many system elements and interactions that statistical mechanics is not useful, but have more elements and interactions than allows simple modelling and analysis) are now being broken down for analysis. The attitude is “we have to start somewhere, so lets start at the bottom with the simplest cases and work our way up”. Such an approach has recently been suggested for the advancement of social science as a whole.

This still means our “virtual Geographies” and “virtual Landscapes” will still be hampered by huge parameter spaces for now. But what about if we try to integrate simple agent-based models of real systems into larger models of systems that we know to be more homogenous (‘predictable’?) in their behaviour. This is the problem I have been wrestling with regarding my landscape model – how do I integrate a model of human decision-making with a model of vegetation dynamics and wildfire. From the brief discussion I’ve presented here (and some other thinking) I think the most appropriate approach is to treat the agent-based decision-making model like the physicists do – examine the system properties that emerge from the individual interactions of agents. In my case, I can run the model for characteristic parameter sets and examine the composition (i.e. “how much?”) and configuration (i.e. “how spatially oriented?”) of the land cover that emerges and use this to constrain the vegetation dynamics model.

So, the summer school was very interesting, I got to meet many people from very different academic backgrounds (physicists, mathematicians, computer scientists, cognitive scientists, psychologists, sociologists, economists…) and discuss how they approach their problems. I think this has given me a broader understanding of the types and uses of models available for studying complex systems. Hopefully I’ll be able to use some of this understanding of different techniques in the future to good effect when studying the interaction between social and environmental systems.

The complex systems approach does offer many possibilities for the investigation of social systems. However, for the study of humans and society this sort of modelling will only go so far. We’ll still need our sociologists, ‘human’ geographers, and the like to study the qualitative aspects of these systems, their components and interactions. After all, real people don’t like being labelled or pigeon-holed.

Bill Cronon: Secular Apocaplyse


I saw this photo a couple of days ago. It’s a comparison of the state of a Chilean glacier in 1928 with 2004. The glacier is retreating by 14 metres per year, attributed by scientists to a warming of the global climate. At that rate of retreat the it could be gone in 25 years. Look at that panorama though – would’t it be great to go and see that before it’s gone? Imagine if you were stood there confronted by this awesome sight, what would you be thinking? Greenpeace have been pretty sneaky though (as they have a right to be). Using those beautiful photos that would stick in my mind; when I arrived at that vista I might just think, “I contributed to this”.

I made a point of going to see Bill Cronon at the Thursday morning plenary “Narrative of climate change” at the RGS conference. He suggested that narratives of climate change have been used as both prediction AND (secular) prophecy. This idea of a secular prophecy comes from recent intonations of Nature as a secular proxy for God. Prophecies are often told as stories of retribution that will be incurred if God’s laws were broken. If Nature is a proxy for God then Climate Change is portrayed as a retribution for humans breaking the laws of Nature.

Cronon suggests that Global Narratives are abstract, virtual, systemic, remote, vast, have a diffuse sense of agency, posses no individual characters (i.e. no heros/villains), and are repetitive (so boring). These characteristics make it difficult to emphasise and justify calls for human action to mitigate against the anthropic influence on the climate. Cronon suggests these types of prophetic narrative are ‘unsustainable’ because they do not offer the possibility of individual or group action to reverse or address global climate problems, and therefore are no use politically or socially.

Coronon went on to discuss the micro-cosms (micro narratives) Elizabeth Kolbert uses in her book “Field Notes from a Catastrophe” to illustrate the impacts of global change in a localised manner. She uses individual stories that are picked because they are not expected, they are non-abstract and the antithesis of the unsustainable global narratives. He concluded that we need narratives that offer hope, and not those tied to social and political models based on anarchic thought that do not address the systemic issues driving the change itself. This is the political challenge he suggests – to create narratives that not only make us think “I contributed to this” when we see evidence of glacier retreat, but that offer us hope of finding ways to reduce our future impact upon the environment.

Norman Maclean, Young Men and Fire

Book Review

I expect I was wheeling my bike through the tourists, guzzling on my choco-milk after a session in the gym. Those book stalls under Waterloo Bridge on the South Bank get me everytime. This one must have jumped at me, out of the titles and authors streaming by, me the fly.

I’m sure it was because I’d read Norman Maclean before – A River Runs Through It, the story of Montana fly-fishing. But the title also intrigued me; Young Men and Fire. It wasn’t until I’d parted with my £3.50 and began reading just recently that I really discovered how intrigued I would become.

Other reviews will offer you a
better description of the story and more evocative excerpts, but I’ll concentrate less on the story and more on the storytelling. The story is the events of 5th August 1949 when 12 USFS smokejumpers died on a fire in Mann Gulch, Montana, and Maclean’s exploits to understand the tragic events years later. The telling is part story, part history,part science.

“Historical questions the storyteller must face, although in a place of his own choosing, but his most immediate question as he faces new material is always, Will anything strange or wonderful happen here? The rights and wrongs come later and likewise the scientific know how.”

The first third of the book is the story of the tragedy. It’s only later that the detective story begins, where we start “… examining how all the little cockeyed things all fit together to explain one big cockeyed thing”. This is where Maclean begins to suggest that not only did the events of the day happen because ‘everything was just right’ but that the route to discovering what happened also depends on everything being ‘just right’. The process of discovering is often as historically contingent as the history.

Maclean describes his ‘ah-ha!’ moment, his ‘eureka!’, when he thought “that’s funny”. On a boat trying to piece the bits of puzzle together in his mind of how and why those men got caught by the fire, he sees a wave on the water ‘going the wrong way’. Or rather, going in a direction he wasn’t expecting because of the winds that come and go.

Wind is the whip of the fire, spurring it on, pointing the way. The winds on the day of the fire all came together at the right time across the unique topography of the gulch to cause a ‘blowup’, an explosion of fire throwing flames tens of metres high and accelerating fire spread to speeds faster than a man can run. Faster even than a man running for his life.

Everything that had to fit that day did fit that day – but the evidence of those conditions may still be observed in the broader patterns of the landscape that are shaped by the prevailing winds. Processes acting at different rates and extents leave their evidence at different rates and extents. Maclean saw those patterns one day by chance and thought “that’s funny”.

So just as the tragedy was dependent upon “everything fitting together”, so too is the path or route to discovery? The patterns are there but they must coincide with our observation for us to understand? Or is this just the way we tell the story of discovery, linearizing the complex web of our thought processes? How can we know what subconscious links are being made when we think “that’s funny”? Or is the most important skill knowing when “that’s funny” really is funny?

The scientist in the storytelling is Richard C. Rothermel, he of mathematical fire modelling fame. Maclean asks for Rothermel’s help to use his mathematical models to plot the race between the young men and fire on the axes of distance and time. Maclean seems reasonably confident with results of the model – the numbers seem to fit with his qualitative understanding of the events. But he’s not totally convinced by the numbers alone. Just as fire requires the triangle of heat, fuel and oxygen, the events and his understanding of them require story, history and science;

“We are beyond where arithmetic can explain what was happening in the piece of nature that had been the head of Mann Gulch … Near the end of many tragedies it seems right that there should be moments when the story stops and looks back for something it left behind and finds it and finds it because of the things it learned, as it were, by having lived through the story.”

Young Men and Fire is quintessentially ‘Direction not Destination’. The route to discovery is important. The modelling is as important as the model. Hindsight is a wonderful thing because of contingency and history. But hindsight is also painful; it allows us to understand the tragedies that befell the young, who could not see it until it was upon them.

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Maclean, N (1992) Young Men and Fire Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN: 0226500624

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Fire Ignition by Arson

It seems many of the fires that have been burning in Spain recently have been caused by arson. Unfortunately this isn’t uncommon in Spain (or the Med as a whole) where over 95% of fires are human-caused (indirectly or directly).

So, how do we account for this in any model of wildfire regimes? Regarding the location of ignition, is arson more likely near or far from other human activity? What is the frequency of arson ignitions in a region linked to? Economic conditions? High levels of land tenure fragmentation (and therefore more borders across which farmers might conflict)?

As always there’s much work to do on these questions. In large part, accurate assessment of arson ignitions is likely to be dependent upon psychological understanding as much as anything else. For me, I’ll concentrate on the potential influence of increased tourism in rural areas and the consequent ‘accidental’ ignitions.

More fire pictures

Update: More comments on this blog post have been posted here

Landscape Influences Human Social Interaction

Scientific American: Landscape Influences Human Social Interaction

Thay know all about this in Spain. One of the presentations at the THEMES Summer School I was at in June was all about the current problems in the Barcelona suburbs as people decide they want nice green lawns like they see on Desperate Housewives.

Domene E., Sauri D., Parés M. 2005, ‘Urbanization and Sustainable
Resource Use: The Case of Garden Watering in the Metropolitan Region of Barcelona’,
Urban Geography, Vol.26, Number 6, pp.520-535.

So maybe it’s “natural” for us to want to live in “unnatural” surroundings…

wheels of change

I finally got out of the house today to do something other than go to football training, the gym, or the supermarket – to Granny’s for Sunday Lunch. Woohoo!

After a handsome lunch and an epic game of Chinese Chequers (myself and sibling 2 tying crossing the line in a photo finish) we headed to the garden to test-drive the new lawn mower. This new one has wheels so it’s easier for Granny to push. However, she obviously hadn’t cut the grass since the 1950’s as she insisted on using the 21st century electric cutter like a heavy old rotary machine. The busy lizzies took a bit of a beating. They were dizzy lizzies by the end. After some coaching she chilled out; deep breaths, just walk with it front of you, no need to thrash it vigorously back and forth.

That was the second meeting of wheels and change today – I had to pick up Nan from her house to take her to lunch. A tough yoga injury and some weakening triceps means she struggles to heave the Routmaster bus-sized steering wheel of her 1970’s (maybe even 60’s) Morris Minor Traveller around the corners these days. Parallel parking in that thing must be a ‘mare. After 40 years, 2 Morris’ and about 300,000 miles she’s going to get a new car. She’s been a long way in those cars; change is hard sometimes.

Speaking of Routemasters and change I’m currently wathching a documentary on the passing of London’s Routemaster buses. Reminds me of the day they ran the last 38 buses from Hackney to Victoria. I took the bus to Uni that day – it was halfway to my destination before I realised why all those weired guys in anoraks were standing at all the stops, snapping pics as we went past (I was top deck in the front row – my favourtie place on the bus, checking the coast was clear). Bendy buses on the 38 route now – rubbish. More people, less seating, no conductor. Sure, we couldn’t continue with those old buses – poor accessibility, dangerous (it looks eeeeaaaaasy to jump on the platform at the back when it moving at ONLY 10 miles and hour. Many a dislocated shoulder and arse over elbow shennanigans. Doesn’t hurt when you’re drunk though: just ask Marsh.) But those bendy buses are rubbish. Single deck – how can you look out of the front of the bus on the top deck when there’s no top deck? They took my favourite place. Maybe that’s really why I don’t like them. Twice as long, 50% as wide, and half as tall. Still only 4 wheels.

Wheels. Wheels of change. ‘Change is Good’? Not always, but you’ve got to expect it. Turn it to one’s advantage. Turn it hard enough and you’ll go 360. New lawn mower, new car, new buses. But they can still take you in the same direction, achieve the same objective. Continue on your merry way, on your life’s road, happy you turned the wheel of change to your advantage. More on the docu about Japan, Space and Geology another day.