physical mechanism underlying opinion spreading

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Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading Jia Shao Shlomo Havlin, H. Eugene Stanley Shao, S. Havlin, and H. E. Stanley, Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 018701 (2

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Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading. Jia Shao Shlomo Havlin, H. Eugene Stanley. J. Shao, S. Havlin, and H. E. Stanley, Phys. Rev. Lett. 103 , 018701 (2009). Questions. How can we understand, and model the coexistence of two mutually exclusive opinions? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

Jia Shao

Shlomo Havlin, H. Eugene Stanley

J. Shao, S. Havlin, and H. E. Stanley, Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 018701 (2009).

Page 2: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

Questions

• How can we understand, and model the coexistence of two mutually exclusive opinions?

• Is there a simple physical mechanism underlying the spread of mutually exclusive opinions?

Page 3: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

Motivation

• Coexistence of two (or more) mutual exclusive opinions are commonly seen social phenomena.

Example: US presidential elections • Community support is essential for a small

population to hold their belief.

Example: the Amish people • Existing opinion models fail

to demonstrate both.

Page 4: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

What do we do?

• We propose a new opinion model based on local configuration of opinions (community support), which shows the coexistence of two opinions.

• If we increase the concentration of minority opinion, people holding the minority opinion show a “phase transition” from small isolated clusters to large spanning clusters.

• This phase transition can be mapped to a physical process of water spreading in the layer of oil.

Page 5: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

Evolution of mutually exclusive opinions

Time 0

Time 1

Time 2

: =2:3

: =3:4

stable state(no one in local minority opinion)

Page 6: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

A. Opinion spread for initially : =2:3

stable state : =1:4

Page 7: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

B. Opinion spread for initially: =1:1

stable state : =1:1

Page 8: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

“Phase Transition” on square lattice

critical initial fraction fc=0.5

size of the second largest cluster ×100

Phase 1 Phase 2

A

B

larg

est

Page 9: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

2 classes of network: differ in degree k distribution

Poisson distribution: Power-law distribution:

P(k

)

k

Poisson distribution

Scale Free

Log(

P(k

))Log(k)

Power-lawdistribution

Edges connect randomly Preferential Attachment

(ii) scale-free (i) Erdős-Rényi

( ) ~ exp( )!

ktP k t

k ( ) ~P k k

µ Log

P(k

)Log k

µ µ

Page 10: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

“Phase Transition” for both classes of network

fc≈0.46

Q1: At fc , what is the distribution of cluster size “s”? Q2: What is the average distance “r” between nodes b

elonging to the same cluster?

(a) Erdős-Rényi (b) scale-free

fc≈0.30

µ

Page 11: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

Invasion Percolation

• Invasion percolation describes the evolution of the front between two immiscible liquids in a random medium when one liquid is displaced by injection of the other.

• Trapped region will

not be invaded.

Example: Inject water into layer containing oil

A: Injection Point D. Wilkinson and J. F. Willemsen, J. Phys. A 16, 3365 (1983).

Page 12: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

Invasion PercolationTrapped Region of size s P(s) ~ s-1.89

Fractal dimension: 1.84 s ~r1.84

S

S. Schwarzer et al., Phys. Rev. E. 59, 3262 (1999).

Page 13: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

Clusters formed by minority opinion at fc

Cumulative distribution function P(s’>s) ~ s-0.89

PDF P(s) ~ s-1.89

r/s(1/1.84) Const.

s ~ r1.84

Conclusion: “Phase transition” of opinion model belongs to the same universality class of invasion percolation.

r

Page 14: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

Summary

• Proposed an opinion model showing coexistence of two opinions.

• The opinion model shows phase transition

at fc.

• Linked the opinion model with an oil-field-inspired physics problem, “invasion percolation”.

Page 15: Physical Mechanism Underlying Opinion Spreading

Thank you!