Treffer: Known unknowns and the osteological paradox: Why bioarchaeology needs agent-based models.

Title:
Known unknowns and the osteological paradox: Why bioarchaeology needs agent-based models.
Authors:
Anderson AS; Institute of Behavioral Science, University of Colorado, Boulder, 1440 15th St., Boulder, CO 80309, United States; BirthRites Lise Meitner Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, Leipzig 04103, Germany. Electronic address: Amy.Anderson-1@colorado.edu., DeWitte SN; Institute of Behavioral Science, University of Colorado, Boulder, 1440 15th St., Boulder, CO 80309, United States.
Source:
International journal of paleopathology [Int J Paleopathol] 2026 Mar; Vol. 52, pp. 32-43. Date of Electronic Publication: 2025 Dec 01.
Publication Type:
Journal Article; Historical Article
Language:
English
Journal Info:
Publisher: Elsevier Country of Publication: Netherlands NLM ID: 101562474 Publication Model: Print-Electronic Cited Medium: Internet ISSN: 1879-9825 (Electronic) Linking ISSN: 18799817 NLM ISO Abbreviation: Int J Paleopathol Subsets: MEDLINE
Imprint Name(s):
Publication: : Amsterdam : Elsevier
Original Publication: [New York, NY] : Elsevier
Contributed Indexing:
Keywords: Equifinality; Individual-based model; Paleodemography; Paleoepidemiology; Survival analysis; Under-identifiability
Entry Date(s):
Date Created: 20251202 Date Completed: 20260221 Latest Revision: 20260221
Update Code:
20260222
DOI:
10.1016/j.ijpp.2025.11.004
PMID:
41330016
Database:
MEDLINE

Weitere Informationen

Objective: This paper demonstrates computational modeling's value as a tool for mapping the impact of hidden variables and evaluating the accuracy of statistical methods in bioarchaeology.
Materials: As a working example, this paper presents an agent-based model of a 1,000-person cohort of individuals who can form an unspecified skeletal lesion at any age between birth and ten years and enter a simulated cemetery at the end of their lives. Skeletal lesions either have no effect on mortality risk (scenario 1) or are associated with doubled mortality risk (scenario 2).
Methods: The agent-based model simulates data on individual age at death and lesion status. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis is run on each simulated dataset, comparing survival estimates for individuals with and without lesions.
Results: Survival analyses underestimate the true value of lesion-associated mortality risk in early life in scenario 2 and produce a false lesion-associated survival advantage under the null conditions of scenario 1.
Conclusions: Researchers should account for the ages of a skeletal lesion's developmental window, where known, when assessing lesion-associated mortality. Survival analyses return accurate results when they exclude individuals in the ages of active lesion formation.
Significance: Modeling experiments can identify which archaeologically unmeasurable variables have the greatest impact on estimates of population health and outline the ways in which they bias estimates of past health from the skeletal record.
Limitations: The only limits on modeling are limits of imagination and common sense.
Suggestions for Future Research: Many other archaeologically hidden variables remain to be explored with this approach.
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