Diffusion of Opinions in a Complex Culture System: Implications for Emergence of Descriptive Norms
Authored by Wenjun Gao, Lin Qiu, Chi-yue Chiu, Yiyin Yang
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1177/0022022115610212
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Abstract
People take descriptive norms into account when making decisions, even
when they do not personally believe in the norms; when the norms do not
correspond to the actual preferences of the group; and when the decision
is a high stake one. A prevailing challenge in culture and norm research
is to identify the sociocultural processes through which ideas spread
and become part of the descriptive norms in the society, as well as the
processes through which the diffusion of ideas is contained. In the
present article, the authors review two emerging communication
perspectives on idea diffusion and norm emergence: neo-diffusionism and
complexity theory. In addition, the authors illustrate in an agent-based
modeling study how complexity theory can shed new light on how opinions
spread through interpersonal communication in a complex cultural system.
Preliminary results show that as long as most agents in the system
prefer talking to others sharing the same opinion, the relative
distribution of majority and minority opinions in the system will not
change. Interestingly, when egocentric speech is coupled with the
preference to communicate with dissimilar others, the level of cognitive
homogeneity level (i.e., opinion consensus) in the system increases. In
contrast, when audience design is coupled with the preference to
communicate with dissimilar others, the level of cognitive diversity
level in the system increases. The implications of the results for
emergence of descriptive norms are discussed.
Tags
Communication
knowledge
Consensus
Memory
Assumptions
Construction
Shared reality