FEW SELF-INVOLVED AGENTS AMONG BOUNDED CONFIDENCE AGENTS CAN CHANGE NORMS
Authored by Sylvie Huet, Jean-Denis Mathias
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1142/s0219525918500078
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
Social issues are generally discussed by highly-involved and
less-involved people to build social norms defining what has to be
thought and done about them. As self-involved agents share different
attitude dynamics to other agents [Wood, W., Pool, G., Leck, K. and
Purvis, D., Self-definition, defensive processing, and influence: The
normative impact of majority and minority groups, J. Pers. Soc. Psychol.
(1996) 1181-1193], we study the emergence and evolution of norms through
an individual-based model involving these two types of agents. The
dynamics of self-involved agents is drawn from [Huet, S. and Deffuant,
G., Openness leads to opinion stability and narrowness to volatility,
Adv. Complex Syst. 13 (2010) 405-423], and the dynamics of others, from
[Deffuant, G., Neau, D., Amblard, F. and Weisbuch, G., Mixing beliefs
among interacting agents, Adv. Complex Syst. 3 (2001) 87-98]. The
attitude of an agent is represented as a segment on a continuous
attitudinal space. Two agents are close if their attitude segments share
sufficient overlap. Our agents discuss two different issues, one of
which, called main issue, is more important for the self-involved agents
than the other, called secondary issue. Self-involved agents are
attracted to both issues if they are close to the main issue, but shift
away from their peer's opinion if they are only close on the secondary
issue. Differently, non-self-involved agents are attracted by other
agents when they are close on both the main and secondary issues. We
observe the emergence of various types of extreme minor clusters. In one
or different groups of attitudes, they can lead to an already-built
moderate norm or a norm polarized on secondary and/or main issues. They
can also push disagreeing agents gathered in different groups to a
global moderate consensus.
Tags
polarization
Opinion dynamics
Bounded Confidence Model
Model
Power
norm
attraction
Involvement
Similarity
Rejection
Extreme minority effect
Leads