Modelling and measuring complexity of traditional and ancient technologies using Petri nets
Sebastian Fajardo (1), Jetty Kleijn (2), Frank W. Takes (2), Geeske, H.J. Langejans (1, 3) ((1) Department of Materials Science, Engineering, Delft University of Technology, (2) Leiden Institute of Advanced Computer, Science LIACS

TL;DR
This paper introduces a Petri net-based method to model and analyze the complexity of traditional and ancient production systems, addressing limitations of previous approaches and enabling detailed comparison of sociotechnical processes.
Contribution
It presents a novel Petri net modeling approach for assessing behavioral and structural complexity in ancient production systems, overcoming prior methodological limitations.
Findings
Petri nets effectively model non-sequential processes.
Concurrency is significant in adhesive production systems.
Changes in location influence behavioral complexity.
Abstract
Technologies and their production systems are used by archaeologists and anthropologists to study complexity of sociotechnical systems. However, there are several issues that hamper agreement about what constitutes complexity and how we can systematically compare the complexity of production systems. In this work, we propose a novel approach to assess the behavioural and structural complexity of production systems using Petri nets. Petri nets are well known formal models commonly used in, for example, biological and business process modelling, as well as software engineering. The use of Petri nets overcomes several obstacles of current approaches in archaeology and anthropology, such as the incompatibility of the intrinsic sequential logic of the available methods with inherently non sequential processes, and the inability to explicitly model activities and resources separately. We test…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCephalopods and Marine Biology
