OPENNESS LEADS TO OPINION STABILITY AND NARROWNESS TO VOLATILITY
Authored by Sylvie Huet, Guillaume Deffuant
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1142/s0219525910002633
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Abstract
We propose a new opinion dynamic model based on the experiments and
results of Wood et al. (1996). We consider pairs of individuals
discussing on two attitudinal dimensions, and we suppose that one
dimension is important, the other secondary. The dynamics are mainly
ruled by the level of agreement on the main dimension. If two
individuals are close on the main dimension, then they attract each
other on the main and on the secondary dimensions, whatever their
disagreement on the secondary dimension. If they are far from each other
on the main dimension, then too much proximity on the secondary
dimension is uncomfortable, and generates rejection on this dimension.
The proximity is defined by comparing the opinion distance with a
threshold called attraction threshold on the main dimension and
rejection threshold on the secondary dimension. With such dynamics, a
population with opinions initially uniformly drawn evolves to a set of
clusters, inside which secondary opinions fluctuate more or less
depending on threshold values. We observe that a low attraction
threshold favors fluctuations on the secondary dimension, especially
when the rejection threshold is high. The opinion evolutions of the
model can be related to some stylized facts.
Tags
Communication
Dynamics
Culture
Consensus
bounded confidence
Model
Impact
Self