HoMer: Modelling Environments Affording Agent-Environment Interactions Leveraging GIS Data

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.59297/b0wedr28

Keywords:

Agent Based Social Simulation, Environment modelling, Spatial entity, Methodology, Interaction

Abstract

As many cities are increasingly threatened by natural disasters, the study of evacuation and population behaviour during those disasters is identified as a crucial point by many stakeholders and researchers. As the environment is very important in those studies, integrating Geographic Information Systems (GIS) data into an Agent-Based Social Simulation (ABSS) marks a significant step forward in crisis modelling. However, it also introduces a key challenge: adapting highly detailed spatial data to reduce environmental complexity while preserving the essential information necessary to approximate higher-resolution environments. Drawing on two disaster evacuation scenarios using different spatial data structures, namely graph-based and grid-based representations, this paper proposes an original methodology to address this challenge. The proposed methodology, HoMer (Homogeneous Merging), provides a structured approach to reducing spatial resolution while retaining crucial information and striking a balance in computational scale for environments that afford agent-environment interactions. It is composed of a three-step framework: (1) attribute reduction, (2) merging of spatial entities, and (3) evaluation of the output. Our results demonstrate that HoMer makes it possible to identify an appropriate ABSS resolution for a given project while maintaining maximum data integrity.

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Published

2026-05-22

Conference Proceedings Volume

Section

ISCRAM Proceedings

How to Cite

Loup--Hadamard, F., Belfrage, M., Di Tursi, F., Lorig, F., Dugdale, J., Davidsson, P., Adam, C., & Frantz, C. (2026). HoMer: Modelling Environments Affording Agent-Environment Interactions Leveraging GIS Data. Proceedings of the International ISCRAM Conference, 23. https://doi.org/10.59297/b0wedr28

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