Corbit R. Sampson, Mason A. Porter, Juan G. Restrepo
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Oscillatory and Excitable Dynamics in an Opinion Model with Group Opinions
In traditional models of opinion dynamics, each agent in a network has an
opinion and changes in opinions arise from pairwise (i.e., dyadic) interactions
between agents. However, in many situations, groups of individuals can possess
a collective opinion that may differ from the opinions of the individuals. In
this paper, we study the effects of group opinions on opinion dynamics. We
formulate a hypergraph model in which both individual agents and groups of 3
agents have opinions, and we examine how opinions evolve through both dyadic
interactions and group memberships. In some parameter regimes, we find that the
presence of group opinions can lead to oscillatory and excitable opinion
dynamics. In the oscillatory regime, the mean opinion of the agents in a
network has self-sustained oscillations. In the excitable regime, finite-size
effects create large but short-lived opinion swings (as in social fads). We
develop a mean-field approximation of our model and obtain good agreement with
direct numerical simulations. We also show, both numerically and via our
mean-field description, that oscillatory dynamics occur only when the number of
dyadic and polyadic interactions per agent are not completely correlated. Our
results illustrate how polyadic structures, such as groups of agents, can have
important effects on collective opinion dynamics.