The role of fanatics in consensus formation
Authored by Semra Gunduc
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1142/s0129183115500291
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Abstract
A model of opinion dynamics with two types of agents as social actors
are presented, using the Ising thermodynamic model as the dynamics
template. The agents are considered as opportunists which live at sites
and interact with the neighbors, or fanatics/missionaries which move
from site to site randomly in persuasion of converting agents of
opposite opinion with the help of opportunists. Here, the moving agents
act as an external influence on the opportunists to convert them to the
opposite opinion. It is shown by numerical simulations that such
dynamics of opinion formation may explain some details of consensus
formation even when one of the opinions are held by a minority.
Regardless the distribution of the opinion, different size societies
exhibit different opinion formation behavior and time scales. In order
to understand general behavior, the scaling relations obtained by
comparing opinion formation processes observed in societies with varying
population and number of randomly moving agents are studied. For the
proposed model two types of scaling relations are observed. In fixed
size societies, increasing the number of randomly moving agents give a
scaling relation for the time scale of the opinion formation process.
The second type of scaling relation is due to the size dependent
information propagation in finite but large systems, namely finite-size
scaling.
Tags
Dynamics
Opinion
Attitude
Physics