also data science and machine learning is at such a point that it's actually quite easy to predict human behaviour, taken en masse. considering humans as simple vectors of disease with variables like population density, humidity, ingress/egress of disease, etc. is very easy to model. i don't know why you have this semi-mystical notion that a human being is some inscrutable actor, as if every single person in NYC is on the verge of picking up a gun, shooting an arab on a sun-struck beach, and then writing a novella about it. epidemiologists have been developing computer models for the movement of human populations and the spread of disease for the entire history of the discipline.
we have already discussed ad nauseam how epidemiologists are able to derive an 'r0-value' for pathogens, essentially estimating how many people will contract a contagious disease from each person.
have you even heard of random forest classifiers? particle swarm optimization algorithms?
did you know that human crowds adopt fluid mechanics behaviour? impossible to guess where people will walk!!! there is just no way that city planners can design these things!
'experts can't use theory to predict human behaviour', says jay, posting from a phone on which every single app has been designed with some aspect of behavioural theory or data science in mind. says jay, who gleans his news from blogsites and facebook feeds that predictively siphon and sift and arrange stories according to the likelihood of him clicking. it's impossible!
did you take anything above trig at college?
http://groups.csail.mit.edu/EVO-DesignO … M_2015.pdf
Last edited by uziq (2020-04-14 13:43:52)