An Agent-Based Model of Status Construction in Task Focused Groups
Authored by Andre Grow, Andreas Flache, Rafael Wittek
Date Published: 2015
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Pseudocode
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/4216/releases/1.2.0/
Abstract
Status beliefs link social distinctions, such as gender and race, to
assumptions about competence and social worth. Recent modeling work in
status construction theory suggests that interactions in small, task
focused groups can lead to the spontaneous emergence and diffusion of
such beliefs in larger populations. This earlier work has focused on
dyads as the smallest possible groups in which status beliefs might
emerge from face-to-face interaction. In today's societies, however, many task focused interactions take place in groups larger than dyads.
In this article, we therefore develop an agent-based computational model
that enables us to study the emergence of status beliefs in groups
larger than dyads. With this model, we address questions such as: Do
basic principles of task focused interaction systematically favor the
emergence of status beliefs in groups larger than dyads? Does the
time-frame over which small groups interact affect the likelihood with
which status beliefs emerge? How does group size affect the emergence of
status beliefs? Computational experimentation with the new model
suggests that behavioral principles known to spontaneously create
hierarchical differentiation between individual group members also tend
to align these hierarchies with categorical differences and thereby
facilitate the emergence of status beliefs. This tendency is stronger in
smaller groups, and in groups that interact either for a very short or
very long time.
Tags
Performance
Expectations
Participation
Nominal characteristics
Status beliefs
Gender