Setting the agenda: Different strategies of a Mass Media in a model of cultural dissemination
Authored by Sebastian Pinto, Pablo Balenzuela, Claudio O Dorso
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.physa.2016.04.024
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Abstract
Day by day, people exchange opinions about news with relatives, friends, and coworkers. In most cases, they get informed about a given issue by
reading newspapers, listening to the radio, or watching TV, i.e., through a Mass Media (MM). However, the importance of a given new can be
stimulated by the Media by assigning newspaper's pages or time in TV
programs. In this sense, we say that the Media has the power to ``set
the agenda{''}, i.e., it decides which new is important and which is
not. On the other hand, the Media can know people's concerns through, for instance, websites or blogs where they express their opinions, and
then it can use this information in order to be more appealing to an
increasing number of people. In this work, we study different scenarios
in an agent-based model of cultural dissemination, in which a given Mass
Media has a specific purpose: To set a particular topic of discussion
and impose its point of view to as many social agents as it can. We
model this by making the Media has a fixed feature, representing its
point of view in the topic of discussion, while it tries to attract new
consumers, by taking advantage of feedback mechanisms, represented by
adaptive features. We explore different strategies that the Media can
adopt in order to increase the affinity with potential consumers and
then the probability to be successful in imposing this particular topic.
(C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Social-influence
Local convergence