Abstract
Consider democracy, money, and family. Diverse as they are, they are
all institutions – human-made cultural artefacts that are fundamental to
a human living in contemporary society. As we move deeper into the 21st
century CE, we are experiencing the changing institutional landscape.
How can we understand this institutional transformation to better
navigate ourselves into the future? In such diverse social science
disciplines as sociology, anthropology, economics, and political
science, institutions are typically understood as regularities of human
social behaviours or rules of conduct informally or formally adhered to
and sanctioned in society. Often called neo-institutionalism, this broad
understanding of human sociality has become a major, if not dominant,
theoretical perspective in many social science disciplines. However, the
psychological underpinnings of institutions – how individual citizens
interact with institutions and participate in their formation,
maintenance, or transformation – have not been investigated fully. We
aim to deepen our understanding of the evolution and devolution of
institutions by developing cognitively rich social agents that can form
and transform institutions. Through empirical observation of digital
information behaviour and psychological experimentation, we examine how
individuals interface with institutions from psychological viewpoints,
and ask how they generate, select, and come to regard some behavioural
regularities and rules of conduct as institutions, and conversely, how
they begin to dismantle them. Combining these empirical insights with
agent-based social simulation, we develop an integrative understanding
of how behavioural regularities and rules of conduct become
institutionalized and deinstitutionalized through ongoing discursive
social processes.
Please note. The subtitle was primarily generated by AI in collaboration with human review and may contain some errors.