Preface.- Chapter 1:Introduction (Marieka
Brouwer Burg, J.H.M. Peeters, and William A. Lovis).- Chapter 2: Is
There a Research Design Role for Sensitivity Analysis (SA) in Archaeological Modeling? (William
A. Lovis).- Chapter 3: Epistemic
Considerations About Uncertainty and Model Selection in Computational
Archaeology: A Case Study on Exploratory Modeling (J.H.M. Peeters and Jan-Willem Romeijn).- Chapter 4: GIS-Based
Modeling of Archaeological Dynamics (GMAD): Weaknesses, Strengths, and the
Utility of Sensitivity Analysis (Marieka Brouwer Burg).- Chapter 5: Assessing Nonlinear Behaviors in an
Agent Based Model (Jon W. Carroll).- Chapter 6: Scale
Dependency in Agent-Based Modeling: How Many Time Steps? How Many Simulations?
How Many Agents? (Joshua Watts).- Chapter 7: The
Sensitivity of Demographic Characteristics to the Strength of the Population
Stabilizing Mechanism in a Model Hunter-Gatherer System (Andrew A. White).- Chapter 8: Archaeological
Simulation and the Testing Paradigm (Thomas G. Whitley).- Chapter 9: “Uncertainties” (Sander van der Leeuw).
Marieka Brouwer Burg (Ph.D. 2011
Michigan State University)is
Lecturer of Anthropology in the Department of Anthropology at the University of
New Hampshire, New Hampshire, USA. She is interested in the effects of
landscape evolution and climate change on human communities, as well as
reconstructing decision processes and perceptions of landscape in the past. She
uses GIS-based archaeological computational modeling to explore these processes
in both Old and New World contexts. Her current research focuses on investigating
the spatiotemporal dimensions of ancient Maya mobility and socioeconomic
interactions in the central Belize River Valley, Belize.
J.H.M. Peeters (Ph.D. 2007 University of Amsterdam) is Associate Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology at the Groningen Institute of Archaeology, University of Groningen. Research interests include Hunter-Gatherer Archaeology and Ethnography; Landscape Archaeology; Lithic Technology; Computational Modeling; Site Formation Dynamics and Fractal Geometry. Current research projects include Late Glacial and Holocene Hunter-Gatherer Landscape Use of the North Sea Basin; Mesolithic Lithic Technology; Hunter-Gatherer Pyro-Technology; Dynamics of Intra-Site Spatial Patterning.
William A. Lovis (Ph.D. 1973 Michigan
State University) is Professor and Curator of Anthropology in the Department of
Anthropology and MSU Museum at Michigan State University, Michigan, USA. His research
interests include Hunter-Gatherer Archaeology and Ethnography; The Transition
to Horticulture; Applied Theory, Analytic Methods and Research Design; Human-Environment
Interactions and Regional Taphonomy; Paleoenvironmental Change; Public Policy
including Forensic Archaeology, Law Enforcement Training, and Repatriation; Great
Lakes/Midwest and Europe. Current research projects include archaeological site
taphonomy and preservation in the Lake Michigan coastal dunes, Mesolithic
regional settlement and mobility in Yorkshire, northern England, and hemispheric
climate impacts on Great Lakes coastal dune evolution and activation cycling.