id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_jkk4wvvxofe27ise2226vb3sxm Ryan Muldoon Segregation That No One Seeks* 2012 29 .pdf application/pdf 9818 767 66 In his landmark studies of this phenomenon1, Thomas Schelling represented a neighborhood as a grid with two types of agents placed randomly these models exhibit significant segregation and clustering of the agents. Our investigation employs a series of Schelling-like models where individuals placed randomly on a toroidal grid assess their utility on the basis of 2Bruch and Mare (2006); Pancs and Vriend (2007); Zhang (2004) presence of significant segregation over a range of spatial scales, visual comparisons between typical equilibrium patterns and test results showed that to every d-neighborhood (given our specific population sizes of each agent As a parallel to cross K-functions, these expected local differences can equivalently be interpreted as values of (2) for a randomly sampled target agent. Estimating the Number of Agent Clusters To obtain further statistical insight into this segregation phenomena, we constructed a program that When agents' community size is very small (r < 5), the model fails to ./cache/work_jkk4wvvxofe27ise2226vb3sxm.pdf ./txt/work_jkk4wvvxofe27ise2226vb3sxm.txt