Network Models of Minority Opinion Spreading: Using Agent-Based Modeling to Study Possible Scenarios of Social Contagion
Authored by Javier Alvarez-Galvez
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1177/0894439315605607
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Abstract
Although several models in the literature analyze the dynamics of
opinion formation, less attention has been paid to explain how the
structure of social networks and their contextual circumstances can
influence the course of minority public opinions. This work aims to pose
three basic questions: (1) how the structure of social networks can
affect the spread of minority opinion, (2) how committed agents
influence this process, and (3) how mass media action, as a contextual
factor, can vary different agents' opinions and network composition.
Agent-based modeling is used to create a network model of preferential
attachment to explore how phenomena of minority opinion spreading can
evolve under different simulated scenarios. This study shows that the
success of minority opinions depends on network structure and
composition and thus on external factors such as mass media action that
can mediate the strength of these internal determinants. Although people
tend to remain silent when they feel that their opinions are in the
minority, our findings suggest that prevailing majority opinion may be
promptly replaced by what was formerly minority opinion if core agents
in the network structure and/or external sources support this view.
Tags
Evolution
Dynamics
Propagation
Silence