The order of operations in the resource submodel has changed. Formerly, resources would move on the landscape, reproduce, die, and then potentially consume on the landscape. Now, resources feed on the landscape, reproduce, die, and then move.
The default landscape ownership is now divided using a shortest-splitline algorithm, which generates more realistic rectangular blocks of land.
The default perceived effects of different actions have been changed for both the manager and users in the fitness function of the genetic algorithm.
Resource birth and death can now be caused by resource consumption on the landscape using the new arguments consume_repr
, consume_surv
, and times_feeding
(note that movement to new cells occurs between times feeding).
Managers can apply an action threshold, which stops them from updating policy in a time step if the observed resource density is sufficiently close to the target. If they do not update policy, managers can receive a budget bonus that can be applied to the next time step. Relevant arguments are action_thres
and budget_bonus
, and a new vignette explains their use.
The perceived effects of different actions for users can now be manually set using the arguments, perceive_scare
, perceive_cull
, perceive_cast
, perceive_feed
, perceive_help
, perceive_tend
and perceive_kill
. Hence, it is possible to make users perceive some actions to be more or less effective than they are likely to be.
Land ownership can be allocated unevenly among users using the ownership_var
argument.
Manager and user budgets can now be incremented as a function of landscape yield using the usr_yld_budget
and man_yld_budget
arguments.
The gmse_gui
function has been updated so that options available in gmse
and gmse_apply
also work in gmse
.
Differences between default arguments of gmse
and gmse_apply
have now been rectified. Now a run of gmse
and looped gmse_apply
with default subfunctions returns the same system dynamics.
A crash in gmse_apply
caused by setting an argument name to the argument itself (e.g., stakeholders = stakeholders
) was noticed sometimes. An error message is now produced in gmse_apply
to warn against having the same name for an argument and the argument’s value.