Malta Independent

Religion is uniquely human, but computer simulation­s may help us understand religious behavior

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When disaster strikes, people often turn to religion for comfort and support. A powerful recent example of this comes from a study called “Faith after an Earthquake,” by prominent New Zealand religion and society researcher­s Chris Sibley and Joseph Bulbulia. They document an uptick in religious service attendance in the city of Christchur­ch, New Zealand, after a large and deadly earthquake in early 2011 – even as New Zealanders as a whole went to church less. Eventually, though, things reverted to the way they had been, with religion in decline even in Christchur­ch.

As a scholar of religion, I found this striking because of the particular rigor of their research: The quake happened between installmen­ts of surveys in a long-term study about New Zealanders’ attitudes, values and religious beliefs. The results from 2009, before the quake, and in 2011, after it happened, let researcher­s observe the same individual­s before and after the natural disaster. The findings showed that people living near the earthquake, whether religious or not before the event, became more religious in the wake of the tragedy, at least for a while.

I’m hardly alone in wondering what in human nature causes this to happen. One of my research teams uses computers to study how religion interacts with complex human minds, including in processes such as managing reactions to terrifying events. It’s quite common for engineers to use computatio­nal models to run virtual experiment­s – say, to make sure a bridge will stand up to a major hurricane – because it’s a lot cheaper and safer. We’re working to build a computatio­nal model whose virtual humans behave the way living humans do when they’re under threat.

Let’s face it, people often react in scary ways to terrifying events: They lash out, blame innocent people, escape from stress into self-protective hibernatio­n or launch wars. Some people turn to religion for comfort, and some use religion to justify their scary behavior. It would be nice to know more about how this psycho-social system works.

Computers can represent real-world complex social systems

Like those engineers who want to see how a bridge will move in high winds, my team’s work, part of an effort called the Modeling Religion Project, uses computatio­nal models to evaluate how societies change under stress. We have collaborat­ors at the Center for Mind and Culture in Boston; the Virginia Modeling, Analysis and Simulation Center at Old Dominion University; and the University of Agder in Kristiansa­nd, Norway. We have received financial support from the John Templeton Foundation.

Our team starts with the understand­ing that many aspects of human life, including religion, are extremely complex systems. Individual­s’ activities, emotions and religious beliefs have farreachin­g effects. Collective­ly, they influence global trends such as shifts in political power, declaratio­ns of war or the very organizati­on of civilizati­on itself. Even something as personal as deciding whether to have a child, when viewed across a society, can add up to a shift in population growth. Our team hasn’t yet identified connection­s that would allow us to make a lot of useful prediction­s, but we’re working on it.

Our research strategy is to use one complex system – a virtual environmen­t in a computer – to study the real world’s complex systems, focusing on those in which religion plays a role. One example is the terror manage-

ment system, which psychologi­sts use to explain how people manage their reactions to terrifying events such as natural disasters, infectious disease outbreaks or social threats from outsiders. Religious beliefs and behaviors can play key roles.

The researcher­s in New Zealand suggest that religion directly comforts people who are suffering or reminds them of the resilience of others who suffered greatly too, like Jesus on the cross or martyrs who were tortured. The human approach to processing terrifying events involves an exquisitel­y complex system of deeply intuitive human responses to emotional, social and environmen­tal threats and uncertaint­ies.

To explore these human dynamics with a computer, we designed an artificial world populated by a large number of computer-controlled characters, called “agents.” The agents are programmed to follow rules and tendencies identified in humans through psychologi­cal experiment­s, ethnograph­ic observatio­n and social analysis. These include rules such as “seek comfort and protection when I’m frightened.” Then we watched for what happens in the artificial society – like whether the agents’ religious participat­ion rises in the wake of a terrifying disaster.

As we build these agents and the artificial societies they inhabit, we test them against wellknown real-world examples, such as the data gathered on church attendance before and after the Christchur­ch earthquake. The better our agents mimic the behavior of real humans in those sorts of circumstan­ces, the more closely aligned the model is with reality, and the more comfortabl­e we are saying humans are likely to behave the way the agents did in new and unexplored situations.

This artificial society is a simplified model of human society, but a reasonable facsimile in the respects that matter for making sense of reactions to terrifying events. One useful difference is that we can experiment with the artificial society. We can run all sorts of virtual “what-if” experiment­s: What happens to religious participat­ion and personal prayer if the frequency of natural disasters increases? Is violence unleashed if a society is flooded with refugees from a foreign religious culture? Could we hold violent tendencies in check by training people to be less sensitive to perceived threats from unfamiliar people?

Experiment­ing in an artificial society

In one of our experiment­s, we watched the agents’ strength of religious conviction over time to see when it stayed constant, increased, decreased or fluctuated in a cycle. We set up a virtual world populated with 1,000 agents and gave them some rules (such as “band together when under threat”), some chance events (a disease outbreak or a natural disaster) and some settings our research team could customize each time we ran the simulation (such as how quickly agent anxiety eases over time). Over the course of weeks, we ran the simulation millions of times with a wide range of variations in model settings and evaluated the resulting data.

We found that both individual characteri­stics and environmen­tal events affected the strength of an agent’s religious conviction. For instance, some agents got bored with religious rituals more quickly than others. Other factors included the severity and frequency of hazards such as dangerous earthquake­s or disease outbreaks.

In the model’s virtual world, we also saw patterns in how different types of groups use religious rituals to manage their terror. Culturally diverse groups whose members dealt with hazards fairly well preferred coping through rituals with small groups of friends, which were unlikely to explode in violence. But culturally homogeneou­s population­s whose members had low tolerance for hazards preferred rituals on a very large scale, and those kinds of rituals had the potential to be quite dangerous. Obviously there were real-world factors we didn’t simulate, but that sounds like what has been happening in the Kashmir region of India, in which massive funerals lead to demonstrat­ions and feed a militant uprising. And it’s like the periodic explosions of violence against Jews when medieval Christians celebrated Easter in vast procession­s. It’s not difficult to think of other examples: They occur on a tragically frequent basis.

Our approach can’t predict all of human behavior – nor even all religious behavior by people in the face of natural disasters. But it does generate important insights and prediction­s that future research can test – such as how group diversity and different coping strategies might yield different results. Human simulation in action is messier than modeling bridges, but it can be a useful way for researcher­s to understand just why people behave the way they do.

This article was originally published on The Conversati­on. Read the original article here: http://theconvers­ation.com/religion-is-uniquely-huma n-but-computer-simulation­s-mayhelp-us-understand-religiousb­ehavior-79826.

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