Coupled dynamics of node and link states in complex networks: a model for language competition
Authored by Adrian Carro, Raul Toral, Miguel Maxi San
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/18/11/113056
Sponsors:
European Union
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Inspired by language competition processes, we present a model of
coupled evolution of node and link states. In particular, we focus on
the interplay between the use of a language and the preference or
attitude of the speakers towards it, which we model, respectively, as a
property of the interactions between speakers (a link state) and as a
property of the speakers themselves (a node state). Furthermore, we
restrict our attention to the case of two socially equivalent languages
and to socially inspired network topologies based on a mechanism of
triadic closure. As opposed to most of the previous literature, where
language extinction is an inevitable outcome of the dynamics, we find a
broad range of possible asymptotic configurations, which we classify as:
frozen extinction states, frozen coexistence states, and dynamically
trapped coexistence states. Moreover, metastable coexistence states with
very long survival times and displaying a non-trivial dynamics are found
to be abundant. Interestingly, a system size scaling analysis shows, on
the one hand, that the probability of language extinction vanishes
exponentially for increasing system sizes and, on the other hand, that
the time scale of survival of the non-trivial dynamical metastable
states increases linearly with the size of the system. Thus, non-trivial
dynamical coexistence is the only possible outcome for large enough
systems. Finally, we show how this coexistence is characterized by one
of the languages becoming clearly predominant while the other one
becomes increasingly confined to `ghetto-like' structures: small groups
of bilingual speakers arranged in triangles, with a strong preference
for the minority language, and using it for their intra-group
interactions while they switch to the predominant language for
communications with the rest of the population.
Tags
Social networks
Cooperation
graphs
emergence
Mathematical-model
Organization
Bilingualism
Death
Balance
Ordering dynamics