Institutions and Cultural Diversity: Effects of Democratic and Propaganda Processes on Local Convergence and Global Diversity
Authored by Fernando Sancho, Roberto Ulloa, Celina Kacperski
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0153334
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Java
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/robertour/CulSim/releases/tag/1.0
Abstract
In a connected world where people influence each other, what can cause a
globalized monoculture, and which measures help to preserve the
coexistence of cultures? Previous research has shown that factors such
as homophily, population size, geography, mass media, and type of social
influence play important roles. In the present paper, we investigate for
the first time the impact that institutions have on cultural diversity.
In our first three studies, we extend existing agent-based models and
explore the effects of institutional influence and agent loyalty. We
find that higher institutional influence increases cultural diversity, while individuals' loyalty to their institutions has a small, preserving
effect. In three further studies, we test how bottom-up and top-down
processes of institutional influence impact our model. We find that
bottom-up democratic practices, such as referenda, tend to produce
convergence towards homogeneity, while top-down information
dissemination practices, such as propaganda, further increase diversity.
In our last model-an integration of bottom-up and topdown processes into
a feedback loop of information-we find that when democratic processes
are rare, the effects of propaganda are amplified, i.e., more diversity
emerges; however, when democratic processes are common, they are able to
neutralize or reverse this propaganda effect. Importantly, our models
allow for control over the full spectrum of diversity, so that a
manipulation of our parameters can result in preferred levels of
diversity, which will be useful for the study of other factors in the
future. We discuss possible mechanisms behind our results, applications, and implications for political and social sciences.
Tags
Cooperation
polarization
Model
Personality
globalization
Strategies
Social-influence