Nonlinear Dynamics, Psychology, and Life Sciences, Vol. 12, Iss. 3, Jul, 2008, pp. 281-310 @2008 Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences Toward a Theory of Leadership in Complex Systems: Computational Modeling Explorations Abstract: I propose a new theory of leadership in complex systems based upon computational
modeling approaches that have appeared to date. It is new in that it promises an approach
that is well specified, coherent across levels of analysis, is transparent to the outside
observer and can be modeled computationally. Although many of its independent components
have been modeled, the underlying theory connecting these models is articulated here for
the first time. Leadership is defined as those aspects of agent interactions which catalyze
changes to the local rules defining other agents' interactions. There are five distinct
aspects of leadership to be observed. Leadership involves actions among agents that: (a)
identify or espouse a cooperation strategy or program, (b) catalyze conditions where other
agents choose to participate in the program, (c) organize choices and actions in other
agents to navigate complexity and avoid interaction catastrophe (sometimes called
'complexity catastrophe'), (d) form a distinct output layer that expresses the system
as a unity in its environment, and (e) translate feedback into structural changes
in the influence network among agents. The contribution of this approach is discussed. Keywords: leadership, complexity theory, computational organization theory, computation modeling, complex systems |