Cultural dissimilarity: Boon or bane for technology diffusion?
Authored by Magda Fontana, Elena Beretta, Marco Guerzoni, Alexander Jordan
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.techfore.2018.03.008
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
The paper provides a theoretical model of technology adoption based on
the idea that the diffusion of information about a technology depends
both on the social structure of the adopters and their degree of
assortativity. We propose a framework that - while retaining the core
assumptions of epidemic diffusion models allows for explicit modelling
of the social structure via social network and of agents cultural
heterogeneity via agent-based simulation. Decision-making takes place in
institutional contexts where individual features trigger differentiated
imitative responses and societal organization acts as medium on which
information flows. The model simulates the diffusion of fertilizers in
five Ethiopian villages (Peasant Associations), which differ in both
political and relational structures and farmers belong to numerous
ethnic and religious groups. Starting from survey data we run a
compositional understanding simulation with the aim of reproducing
observed diffusion curves on the basis of unobserved individual
interactions. By minimizing the divergence from model output and
observed diffusion, the exercise of categorical calibration and time
series fit identify a set of plausible parameters for each village.
Results highlight the importance of cultural dissimilarities to
understand the diffusion processes.
Tags
Agent-based modelling
ethnicity
models
Technology diffusion
networks
Adoption
Africa
Network analysis
Innovations
Cultural dissimilarity
Technical change
Hybrid corn
Ethiopia
Witchcraft