Tipping Points
John Wiley & Sons Inc (Verlag)
978-1-118-75275-3 (ISBN)
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J. J. Bissell, Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Durham, UK. C. C. S. Caiado, Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Durham, UK. S. E. Curtis, Institute of Hazard, Risk and Resilience, University of Durham, UK. M. Goldstein, Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Durham, UK. Brian Straughan, Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Durham, UK.
List of Contributors xi Acknowledgements xiii Introduction xv PART I THE SMOKING EPIDEMIC 1 1 Generalised Compartmental Modelling of Health Epidemics 3 1.1 Introduction 3 1.2 Basic compartmental model of smoking dynamics 5 1.3 Properties of the basic model 8 1.4 Generalised model inclusive of multiple peer recruitment 10 1.5 Bistability and 'tipping points' in the generalised model 15 1.6 Summary and conclusions 18 2 Stochastic Modelling for Compartmental Systems Applied to Social Problems 21 2.1 Introduction 21 2.2 Global sensitivity analysis of deterministic models 23 2.3 Sensitivity analysis of the generalised smoking model with peer influence 24 2.4 Adding randomness to a deterministic model 26 2.5 Sensitivity analysis of the stochastic analogue 28 2.6 Conclusion 30 3 Women and Smoking in the North East of England 32 3.1 Introduction 33 3.2 Background 33 3.3 Interrogating the figures 35 3.4 Materialist and cultural or behavioural explanations 39 3.5 The tobacco industry and the creation of social values 41 3.6 Local voices 43 3.7 Conclusions 44 PART II MATHEMATICAL MODELLING IN HEALTHCARE 49 4 Cardiac Surgery Performance Monitoring 51 4.1 Introduction 52 4.2 Statistical framework for monitoring 55 4.3 A non-stationary process 61 4.4 Dynamic modelling approaches 68 4.5 Case example 74 4.6 Discussion 75 4.7 Conclusion 77 5 Heart Online Uncertainty and Stability Estimation 82 5.1 Introduction 83 5.2 Monitoring live complex systems 83 5.3 The Bayes linear approach 85 5.4 The Fantasia and Sudden Cardiac Death databases 86 5.5 Exploring ECG datasets 87 5.6 Assessing discrepancy 91 5.7 Final remarks and conclusion 93 6 Stents, Blood Flow and Pregnancy 95 6.1 Introduction 96 6.2 Drug-eluting stents 97 6.3 Modelling blood flow 101 6.4 Modelling a capillary-fill medical diagnostic tool 103 6.5 Summary and closing remarks 110 PART III TIPPING POINTS IN SOCIAL DYNAMICS 113 7 From Five Key Questions to a System Sociology Theory 115 7.1 Introduction 116 7.2 Complexity features 117 7.3 Mathematical tools 119 7.4 Black Swans from the interplay of different dynamics 122 7.5 Validation of models 125 7.6 Conclusions: towards a mathematical theory of social systems 126 8 Complexity in Spatial Dynamics: The Emergence of Homogeneity /Heterogeneity in Culture in Cities 130 8.1 Introduction 131 8.2 Modelling approach 132 8.3 Description of the model 134 8.4 Sensitivity analysis and results 138 8.5 Discussion and conclusions 141 9 Cultural Evolution, Gene Culture Coevolution, and Human Health 146 9.1 Introduction 147 9.2 Cultural evolution 149 9.3 Epidemiological modelling of cultural change 153 9.4 Gene culture coevolution 157 9.5 Conclusion 163 10 Conformity Bias and Catastrophic Social Change 168 10.1 Introduction 168 10.2 Three-population compartmental model 171 10.3 Basic system excluding conformity bias 173 10.4 Including conformity bias 174 10.5 Comparative statics 176 10.6 Summary 178 10.7 Conclusions 179 Appendix 10.A: Stability in the conformity bias model 180 PART IV THE RESILIENCE OF TIPPING POINTS 183 11 Psychological Perspectives on Risk and Resilience 185 11.1 Introduction 185 11.2 Forensic psychological risk assessments in prisons 186 11.3 Suicide in prisons 187 11.4 Biases in human decision making forensic psychologists making risky decisions 189 11.5 The Port of London Authority 192 11.6 Final thoughts and reflections 194 12 Tipping Points and Uncertainty in Health and Healthcare Systems 196 12.1 Introduction: 'tipping points' as 'critical events' in health systems 197 12.2 Prediction, prevention and preparedness strategies for risk resilience in complex systems 198 12.3 No such thing as a 'never event'? 200 12.4 Local versus large-scale responses to risk 202 12.5 Conclusions: the ongoing agenda for research on tipping points in complex systems 204 Endnotes and acknowledgements 205 References 205 Index 209
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 15.6.2015 |
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Reihe/Serie | Wiley Series in Computational and Quantitative Social Science |
Verlagsort | New York |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 152 x 234 mm |
Gewicht | 426 g |
Themenwelt | Geisteswissenschaften ► Psychologie |
Mathematik / Informatik ► Mathematik ► Wahrscheinlichkeit / Kombinatorik | |
Medizin / Pharmazie ► Medizinische Fachgebiete | |
Studium ► Querschnittsbereiche ► Prävention / Gesundheitsförderung | |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Soziologie | |
ISBN-10 | 1-118-75275-9 / 1118752759 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-118-75275-3 / 9781118752753 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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