2012
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1109514109
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Reconciling long-term cultural diversity and short-term collective social behavior

Abstract: An outstanding open problem is whether collective social phenomena occurring over short timescales can systematically reduce cultural heterogeneity in the long run, and whether offline and online human interactions contribute differently to the process. Theoretical models suggest that short-term collective behavior and longterm cultural diversity are mutually excluding, since they require very different levels of social influence. The latter jointly depends on two factors: the topology of the underlying social… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(114 citation statements)
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“…It became apparent that the final state is rather sensitive to the initial state. In particular, an initial state constructed from an empirical social survey behaved significantly different from an initial state that was generated in a uniformly random way [23]. This implies that cultural dynamics is sensitive to the structure inherent in empirical data.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…It became apparent that the final state is rather sensitive to the initial state. In particular, an initial state constructed from an empirical social survey behaved significantly different from an initial state that was generated in a uniformly random way [23]. This implies that cultural dynamics is sensitive to the structure inherent in empirical data.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Thus, if the cultural vectors in the initial state correspond to real individuals, the outcome of social influence models can be used as a quantitative tool for gaining insight about how real individuals are distributed in cultural space, and indirectly about cultural dynamics in the real world, since the initial cultural state can be regarded as a partial snapshot of the real world dynamics. This is, to a great extent, the perspective of the research presented here, which makes use of a quantitative technique developed in reference [23] On one hand, this technique incorporates the idea of social-influence cultural dynamics, which is encoded by a measure of long-term cultural diversity (LTCD), which makes use of an Axelrod-type model [13] of cultural dynamics with a minimal set of ingredients. The LTCD quantity estimates the extent to which discrepancies between opinions survive after a long period of cultural dynamics governed by consensus-favoring social influence, in the absence of any other process.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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