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Updated: Jun 17, 2026

Quantification of the Potential Impact of Glyphosate-Based Products on Microbiomes
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Common ecology quantifies human insurgency.

Juan Camilo Bohorquez1, Sean Gourley, Alexander R Dixon

  • 1Department of Industrial Engineering and CEIBA Complex Systems Research Center, Universidad de Los Andes, Bogota, Colombia.

Nature
|December 18, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study reveals universal patterns in the size and timing of violent events within insurgent conflicts. A new unified model explains these similarities and variations, linking insurgency, terrorism, and ecology.

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Area of Science:

  • Social Sciences
  • Ecology
  • Conflict Studies

Background:

  • Collective human activities, including violence, often display universal patterns.
  • Previous research identified power-law distributions in war casualties and terrorist attack sizes.
  • Within-conflict event patterns across diverse insurgencies remain largely unexplored.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate universal patterns in the size and timing of violent events within insurgent conflicts.
  • To develop a unified model explaining commonalities and variations in human insurgency.
  • To quantitatively link insurgency, global terrorism, and ecological principles.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of size distributions and timing of within-conflict events across different insurgencies.
  • Development of a unified computational model of human insurgency.
  • Modeling insurgent populations as evolving, self-organized groups with common decision-making.

Main Results:

  • Violent events within insurgent conflicts exhibit remarkable similarities in size and timing.
  • The proposed unified model successfully reproduces these commonalities.
  • Conflict-specific variations are quantitatively explained by underlying rules of engagement.

Conclusions:

  • Human insurgency displays universal patterns, similar to other collective behaviors and ecological systems.
  • The unified model provides a quantitative framework connecting insurgency, global terrorism, and ecological dynamics.
  • The model's parallels with financial market models suggest links between violent and non-violent human behaviors.