Identifying Mechanisms Underlying Peer Effects on Multiplex Networks
Authored by Hang Xiong, Diane Payne, Stephen Kinsella
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.18564/jasss.3797
Sponsors:
Chinese National Natural Science Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We separately identify two mechanisms underlying peer effects in farm
households' adoption of a new crop. A farmer can follow his peers to
adopt a new crop because he learns knowledge about the new crop from
them (social learning) and because he wants to avoid the damage caused
by the practice conflicting with theirs (externalities). Using an
agent-based model, we simulate the two mechanisms on a multiplex network
consisting of two types of social relationships. The simulation model is
estimated using detailed data of social networks, adoption and relevant
socio-economic characteristics from 10 villages in China. We find that
social learning - in this case, the sharing of experiential resources -
among family members and production externalities between contiguous
land plots both significantly influence farmers' adoption. Furthermore,
sharing of experiential resources plays a significant role in the entire
diffusion process and dominates the early phase, whereas externalities
only matter in the late phase. This study shows the roles peer effects
play in shaping diffusion can occur through different mechanisms and can
vary as the diffusion proceeds. The work also suggests that agent-based
models can help disentangle the role of social interactions in promoting
or hindering diffusion.
Tags
Social networks
diffusion
Diffusion of innovation
Technology adoption
Peer effects
Impact
High-value crop