1 / 46

Amblard F.* , Deffuant G.*, Weisbuch G.** *C emagref-LISC **ENS-LPS

The drift to a single extreme appears only beyond a critical connectivity of the social networks Study of the relative agreement opinion dynamics on small world networks. Amblard F.* , Deffuant G.*, Weisbuch G.** *C emagref-LISC **ENS-LPS. General properties of the model.

xannon
Download Presentation

Amblard F.* , Deffuant G.*, Weisbuch G.** *C emagref-LISC **ENS-LPS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The drift to a single extreme appears only beyond a critical connectivity of the social networksStudy of the relative agreement opinion dynamics on small world networks Amblard F.*, Deffuant G.*, Weisbuch G.** *Cemagref-LISC **ENS-LPS

  2. General properties of the model • Individual-based simulation model • Continuous opinions • Pair interactions • Bounded influence

  3. Relative Agreement model (RA) • N agents i • Opinion oi (uniform distrib. [–1 ; +1]) • Uncertainty ui (init. same for all) => Opinion segment [oi - ui ; oi + ui] • The influence depends on the overlap between the opinion segments • No influence if they are too far • Agents are influenced in opinion and in uncertainty • The more certain, the more convincing

  4. j i oj oi ui hij RA Model Overlap : hij Non-overlaping part : 2.ui- hij Agreement : overlap – non-overlap Agreement : 2.(hij – ui) Relative agreement : Agreement/segment RA : 2.(hij – ui)/2. ui = (hij – ui) / ui

  5. RA Model Modifications of opinion and uncertainty are proportional to the « relative agreement » if (RA > 0)  More certain agents are more influential

  6. Totally connected population

  7. Result for u=0.5 for all

  8. Number of clusters variation in function of u (r²=0.99)

  9. u o +1 -1 Introduction of the extremists • U: initial uncertainty of the moderated agents • ue: initial uncertainty of the extremists • pe : initial proportion of the extremists • δ : balance between positive and negative extremists U ue

  10. Central convergence (pe = 0.2, U = 0.4, µ = 0.5,  = 0, ue = 0.1, N = 200).

  11. Both extremes convergence ( pe = 0.25, U = 1.2, µ = 0.5,  = 0, ue = 0.1, N = 200)

  12. Single extreme convergence(pe = 0.1, U = 1.4, µ = 0.5,  = 0, ue = 0.1, N = 200)

  13. Unstable attractors: for the same parameters than the precedent, central convergence

  14. Systematic exploration • Building of y indicator • p’+= prop. of moderated agents that converge to the positive extreme • p’-= idem for the negative extreme • y = p’+2+ p’-2

  15. Synthesis of the different cases for y • Central convergence • y = p’+2+ p’-2 = 0² + 0² = 0 • Both extreme convergence • y = p’+2+ p’-2 = 0.5² + 0.5² = 0.5 • Single extreme convergence • y = p’+2+ p’-2 = 1² + 0² = 1 • Intermediary values of y = intermediary situations • Variations of y in function of U and pe

  16. δ = 0, ue = 0.1, µ = 0.2, N=1000 (repl.=50) • white, light yellow => central convergence • orange => both extreme convergence • brown => single extreme convergence

  17. Synthesis • For a low uncertainty of the moderates (U), the influence of the extremists is limited to the nearest => central convergence • For higher uncertainties, the extremists are more influent (bipolarisation or single extreme convergence) • When extremists are numerous and equally distributed on the both side, instability between central convergence and single extreme convergence (due to the position of the central group + decrease of uncertainties)

  18. Influence of social networks on the behaviour of the model

  19. Adding the social network • Before, population was totally connected, we picked up at random pairs of individuals • Social networks: we start from a static graph, we pick up at random existing relationships (links) from this graph

  20. Von Neumann’s neighbourhood • On a grid (torus) • Each agent has got 4 neighbours (N,S,E,W) • Advantage: more easy visualisation of the dynamics

  21. First explorations on typical cases

  22. Central convergence zonepe=0.2, U=0.4, µ=0.5, δ=0, ue = 0.1

  23. Both extremes convergence zone pe=0.25, U=1.2, µ=0.5, δ =0, ue=0.1

  24. Single extreme convergence zonepe=0.05, U=1.4, µ=0.5, δ = 0, ue=0.1

  25. Basic conclusion • Structure of the interactions / the way agents are organized influences the global behaviour of the model

  26. Systematic exploration (y)

  27. Central convergence case(U=0.6,pe=0.05)

  28. Both extreme convergence case(U=1.4 pe=0.15)

  29. Qualitatively (VN) • For low U : important clustering (low probability to find interlocutors in the neighbourhood, also for extremists) • For higher U : increase of probability to find interlocutors in the neighbourhood Propagation of the extremists’ influence until the meeting with an opposite cluster => both extreme convergence

  30. Hypothesis • From a connectivity value we can observe the same global phenomena than for the totally connected case

  31. Choice of a small-world topology • Principle: starting from a regular structure and adding a noise  for the rewiring of links • The -model of (Watts, 1999) enables to go from regular graphs (low  on the left) to random graphs (high  on the right)

  32. Change of point of view • We choose a particular point of the space (U,pe) corresponding to a single extreme convergence (U=1.8, pe=0.05) • We make vary the connectivity k and  and try to find the single extreme convergence again…

  33. Evolution of convergence types (y) in the parameter space (,k)

  34. Remarks/Observations • Above a connectivity of 256 (25%) we obtain the same results than the totally connected case • When connectivity increase: Transition from both extreme convergence to single extreme convergence • In the transition zone, high standard deviation: mix between central convergence and single extreme convergence

  35. Explanations • Low connectivity => strong local influence of the extremists of each side (both extremes convergence) • For higher connectivity, higher probability to interact with the majority: • Moderates regroup at the centre • Results in a single extreme when majority is isolated from only one of the two extremes (else central convergence)

  36. Explanations • More regular is the network ( low), more the transition takes place for higher connectivity • Regularity of the network reinforces the local propagation of extremism resulting in both extreme convergence

  37. Influence of the network for other values of U • Test on typical cases of convergence in the totally connected case: • Central convergence • Both extreme convergence • Single extreme convergence

  38. Central convergence case U=1.0

  39. Both extreme convergence case U=1.2

  40. Single extreme convergence case U=1.4

  41. Influence of the network for different values of U • Similar dynamics • When increasing k we go from both extreme convergence to the observed case in the totally connected case through a mix between central convergence and observed convergence in the totally connected case • Increasing  the transition takes place for lower connectivity

  42. Remark • In the both extreme convergence case for the totally connected population, the two observed both extremes convergence do not correspond to the same phenomena

  43. For low connectivity, it results from the aggregation of local processes of convergence towards a single extreme

  44. For higher connectivity, global convergence of the central cluster which divides itself in two to converge towards each one of the extreme

  45. Perspectives • Exploration of the influence of other parameters: µ, Ue, • Influence of the population size (change the properties of regular graphs) • Change of the starting structure for the small-world (2-dimension 2, generalized Moore) • Other graphs (Scale-free networks) • Effects of the repartition of the extremists on the graph

  46. Thanks a lot for your attention Some questions ?????

More Related